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"I didn t want them to be anything, to have the graspability of a figure or a statue. They had to be something that you really took time to understand visually and emotionally." Anthony Caro
This catalogue presents fourteen early sculptures by the late artist, many of which had never before been shown in the United States. Documented in vivid color photographs, these exuberant sculptures depict Anthony Caro s decision to bypass representational imagery, and to use bright colors to synthesize the bolted and welded metal parts that replaced it. Along with installation shots and historical…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
"I didn t want them to be anything, to have the graspability of a figure or a statue. They had to be something that you really took time to understand visually and emotionally." Anthony Caro

This catalogue presents fourteen early sculptures by the late artist, many of which had never before been shown in the United States. Documented in vivid color photographs, these exuberant sculptures depict Anthony Caro s decision to bypass representational imagery, and to use bright colors to synthesize the bolted and welded metal parts that replaced it. Along with installation shots and historical photographs, this vibrant book includes a brand-new essay from Tim Marlow that tracks Caro s development as a sculptor, as well as Rosalind Krauss s 1967 Art International article on the artist and the nature of sculpture. This catalogue is published in conjunction with Caro s 2015 show at Gagosian Gallery Beverly Hills.
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Autorenporträt
Tim Marlow is an acclaimed writer, broadcaster, art historian, and director of exhibitions at White Cube in London. He has written extensively on British art and culture. An American art critic and theorist, Rosalind Krauss is a professor of twentieth-century art and theory at Columbia University and one of the founding editors of October, a journal of contemporary art criticism and theory.