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Monday, December 15, 2025 |
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| Richard Tuttle at The Museum of Contemporary Art |
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Richard Tuttle, Two with Any To, #1, 1999. Photo: Tom Powel, courtesy Sperone Westwater, New York.
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CHICAGO.- The Museum of Contemporary Art is showing an exhibit The Art of Richard Tuttle through February 4, 2007. American artist Richard Tuttle (b. 1941) has created a strikingly original body of work that has been critically appraised and internationally acclaimed for more than three decades. Although he is widely recognized as one of the leading artists of his generation, there have been relatively few museum surveys of his work. The Art of Richard Tuttle promises to be the definitive presentation of this important artists work.
Organized by the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, in close collaboration with American artist Richard Tuttle, and curated by Madeleine Grynsztejn, The Art of Richard Tuttle presents the artists work in depth through fifteen bodies of work that encompass a full range of categories from sculpture, painting, drawing, printmaking, and artists books to installation and furniture. It provides an extraordinary opportunity to reevaluate his significant place in the history of art since the mid-1960s, and the relevance and interest this work still holds for emerging and newly established artists today.
Beginning in the mid-1960s, Tuttle began to create eccentrically-shaped painted wood reliefs, followed by ideograms made of galvanized tin, and the unstretched, shaped canvases dyed in offbeat colors that fall squarely within the Postminimalist tradition. As his work evolved, it increasingly pursued a radical reduction of composition elements. By the beginning of the 1980s, Tuttles objects take on a profusion of materials, shapes, colors, volumes, and scales. His works in the 1990s mark a return to smaller-sized work that nevertheless commands attention, followed by discrete bodies of low-relief wall-bound pieces that integrate painting, sculpture, and drawing, challenging concepts of line, surface, color, space, and the frame. The exhibition is accompanied by a major catalogue, offering an extensive analysis of his overall work and his place in the history of late 20th-century art.
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