Minimalism recalibrated: Anne Truitt's first European retrospective opens at K20 Düsseldorf
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Minimalism recalibrated: Anne Truitt's first European retrospective opens at K20 Düsseldorf
Anne Truitt. Pioneer of Minimal Art, Exhibition view, Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen, 2026, Photo: Linda Inconi-Jansen.



DUSSELDORF.- The Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen presents the first European retrospective of the US artist and writer Anne Truitt (1921 – 2004). Bringing together around 120 works spanning more than four decades, the exhibition delivers long-overdue European recognition to Truitt, who for decades has been acknowledged in the
United States as a leading figure of what would come to be known as Minimal Art. Featuring Truitt’s landmark sculptures of the early 1960s, her luminous works on paper, the radical white-on-white Arundel paintings, and the deep black Piths— among the final works she produced—the exhibition traces the full breadth of her practice. Seen through Truitt’s work, Minimal Art is recalibrated—no longer purely rigorous or detached, but revealed as poetic, intimate, and profoundly sensuous. At its core is her deeply embodied use of paint, through which form and color fuse into memory, meaning, and affect.

The Reappraisal of a Pioneer

The exhibition at K20 in Düsseldorf brings together works from all phases of Truitt’s career, situating her art and life within a broader reflection on how artistic canons are formed. As Susanne Gaensheimer, Director of the Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen, notes: “Following our successful exhibitions of Carmen Herrera in 2018, Charlotte Posenenske in 2020, and Lygia Pape in 2022, the exhibition continues the institution’s effort to expand the history of postwar art by foregrounding influential woman artists whose contributions deserve renewed attention.”

Structured chronologically, the exhibition traces Truitt’s practice from 1961 to 2004 across seven chapters, illuminating her sustained engagement with sculpture, painting, and works on paper. Highlights include her early, vividly colored sculptures—Hardcastle (1962), Remembered Sea (1971), and Quipe (1984)—installed with generous spatial clarity in K20’s white galleries. Shown publicly for the first time since the 1960s is Summer Run (1964), a rare metal sculpture produced during Truitt’s time in Japan. Large-scale, elongated paintings such as Echo (1973) and Ojibwa (1993) underscore her lifelong exploration of color as both structure and sensation. A dedicated section revisits the Arundel paintings, whose radical white-on-white surfaces provoked controversy at their debut at the Baltimore Museum of Art in 1975. Also on view are the Piths, a series of deep black canvases Truitt worked on in the aftermath of September 11, 2001. Completing the exhibition, a short film by Jem Cohen (b. 1962), filmed in 1999, offers an intimate glimpse of Truitt at work in her studio.

The exhibition is made possible through major loans from leading US American institutions, including the Dia Art Foundation and Glenstone, as well as from private collections in Belgium, Switzerland, and Spain.

Truitt’s Breakthrough

In 1961, Truitt visited the seminal exhibition American Abstract Expressionists and Imagists at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York with her close friend, the painter Mary Pinchot Meyer (1920 – 1964). There she encountered, for the first time, the monochrome paintings of Barnett Newman (1905 – 1970) and Ad Reinhardt (1913 – 1967). Truitt was forty years old, and the visit marked a decisive artistic awakening.

“It seemed to me that I had never before been free,” she later recalled. “I stayed up almost the whole night.” That night, Truitt conceived her first mature work, entitled First (1961).

The following morning, she purchased wood, clamps, and glue from a local lumber store and constructed a form resembling a small picket fence, painting it with ordinary white household paint. This moment initiated one of the most concentrated and productive periods of her career. Between 1961 and 1963, Truitt produced 35 large-scale wooden sculptures in pale whites and deep, dark hues—works that marked a decisive break from the modern figurative sculptures she had made between 1949 and 1960. With this shift, Truitt arrived at her distinctive artistic language.

As a point of reference, the early piece Untitled (1959), from an important private collection, is shown at K20 for the first time, underscoring the radical nature of this transition. Many other early works from this formative period have since been destroyed.

Reception Since the 1960s

When Minimal Art emerged in New York in the early 1960s, it unsettled audiences with its simple forms, serial objects, and embrace of industrial aesthetics. As early as 1963— preceding the later rise of Donald Judd—Truitt held her first solo exhibition at the renowned André Emmerich Gallery in New York. The exhibition both fascinated and polarized the art world. Truitt was the first artist to present painting as free-standing sculpture. “What I was actually trying to do was to take paintings off the wall, to set color free in three dimensions for its own sake,” she later explained in 1974. Her wooden sculptures, distinguished by luminous, deeply saturated hues, resist the anonymity of industrial form. Meticulously constructed and painted by hand, they transform form and color into carriers of memory, meaning, and affect—rooted in lived experience and the felt reality of being in the world.

Truitt’s work quickly attracted critical attention. In 1967, the influential US American critic Clement Greenberg hailed her as a pioneer of Minimal Art, writing in Recentness of Sculpture: “I was stopped by their dead-pan ‘primariness,’ and I had to look again and again … to discover the power of these ‘boxes’ to move and affect. Far-outness here was stated rather than merely announced and signaled.” Yet Truitt consistently resisted being subsumed under the label of Minimalism. “My art is maximal as far as I am concerned,” she asserted in 1986. “It may not look as if there is much there, but for me it is everything.” A year later, she clarified her position: “My work is totally referential. I’ve struggled all my life to get maximum meaning in the simplest possible form.”

Color as a Carrier of Meaning

What distinguishes Truitt’s work—and marks a decisive departure from the Minimal Art of many of her male contemporaries—is her profoundly sensuous understanding of color. Her sculptures were developed from precise scale drawings, built by a fabricator from marine mahogany plywood, and finished entirely by the artist in a prolonged, physically exacting process. Truitt began with multiple layers of white primer, followed by more than forty hand- applied layers of acrylic paint, each carefully sanded down with sandpaper. The result is a surface of exceptional smoothness, depth, and inner luminosity. For Truitt, color and structure were inseparable; they were meant to form a single unity—paint had to “marry” the wood, as she put it.

Slightly elevated on small risers, her sculptures appear to hover, less as solid objects than as radiant volumes of color that activate the surrounding space. Truitt worked her materials until they became saturated with lived experience—personal encounters, sustained reflection, and memories of specific places. Through their evocative titles, her works register intimate states of mind while remaining attuned to historical and political events.

Yet they never prescribe a fixed meaning. Instead, they invite individual association, opening onto experiences that are at once deeply personal and universally human.

Broadening the Canon

The exhibition demonstrates how Truitt reimagined sculpture in all its formal, emotional, and conceptual depth within the male-dominated art world of the postwar period—and why, despite sustained critical and institutional recognition during her lifetime, her work has remained less widely known than that of many of her male counterparts. This retrospective affirms Truitt as the influential pioneer of Minimal Art she had been since 1961, restoring a crucial and long-missing chapter of art history. At the same time, it underscores the continued resonance of her work and writing for younger generations of artists today.

Thus, the exhibition reveals that Minimal Art was far broader and more heterogeneous than its canonical narratives suggest. Seen through Truitt’s work, the movement emerges as richer, more nuanced, and more open to subjectivity. In an era shaped by digital image saturation and accelerated modes of perception, her works resonate with immediacy. Truitt invites viewers to slow down, to move around her sculptures, and to encounter the world— quite literally—from shifting perspectives. It is an invitation to attentive looking, quiet reflection, and the cultivation of empathy.

Catalogue

Published on the occasion of the artist’s first European retrospective, this extensively illustrated catalogue brings together a text by Truitt herself, selected archival materials, and three newly commissioned scholarly essays. Anne Truitt. Pioneer of Minimal Art, edited by Susanne Gaensheimer, Vivien Trommer, and Manuel Segade; Hatje Cantz Verlag; Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen, Düsseldorf; Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Madrid; 2026. Contributions by Miguel de Baca, Suzanne Hudson, Anne Truitt, and Vivien Trommer. 256 pages, 135 illustrations. English, German, Spanish. Museum edition:
€35.00, Retail edition: €40.00

The exhibition is organized by the Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen, Düsseldorf, Musée de Grenoble, and Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Madrid, and is made possible through support from the Terra Foundation for American Art and the Ernst von Siemens Kunststiftung.

The Terra Foundation for American Art, established in 1978 and having offices in Chicago and Paris, supports organizations and individuals locally and globally with the aim of fostering intercultural dialogues and encouraging transformative practices that expand narratives of American art, through the foundation’s grant program, collection, and initiatives.

“Through her bold use of geometry and color to express emotion and memory, Anne Truitt shaped sculptural practice in the 1960s. The exhibition Anne Truitt. Pionierin der Minimal Art invites visitors to understand abstraction as a language of perception and opens up new approaches to modern sculpture and to one’s own aesthetic experience,” says Dr. Martin Hoernes, Secretary General of the Ernst von Siemens Art Foundation.

Curator: Vivien Trommer










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