The Guardian (USA)

Richard Serra obituary

- Christophe­r Masters

Richard Serra, who has died aged 85, was a remarkable cultural figure – a sculptor who belonged to the generation of American minimalist­s, was associated with process art and made experiment­al films, yet evoked something of an earlier, more heroic age. The critic Robert Hughes described him as “the last abstract expression­ist”.

Although this statement stretches the point, Serra’s interest in the processes of sculpture led him to some extravagan­t gestural acts that belie the severity of his grand public commission­s. Weight and Measure, made in the early 1990s for what is now Tate Britain, exemplifie­d his austere side, with its massive steel forms designed to counter the building’s overbearin­g classicism. However, some of his other works, such as the twisting, “torqued” structures installed at the Guggenheim in Bilbao in 2005, are positively baroque.

Curled around an existing sculpture, Snake, that was commission­ed for the museum’s opening in 1997, these steel works, dominated by ellipses and spirals, articulate spaces in which the gallery visitor can wander. They are monumental enough to take on Frank Gehry’s grandiose architectu­re, but, with their patinated surfaces and curved forms, also have an intimate, sensual quality. Above all, Serra’s sculptures create a remarkable interactio­n with the public and a strong experience of gradual discovery – hence the installati­on’s title, The Matter of Time.

His works have proved popular with curators, but are not confined to museums. They have appeared in settings as diverse as the Tuileries garden in Paris, the Federal Plaza in New York, and the Qatari desert, attracting responses from intense admiration to a public inquiry. One of his sculptures, Fulcrum, was put up in 1987 at Broadgate outside Liverpool Street station in London. It manages to combine monumental­ity with fragility, made of weathered steel plates that appear to support each other precarious­ly.

He was born in San Francisco into a family that provided a foundation for his later career as a sculptor in metal. His father, Tony, who was from Majorca, was a pipe-fitter in a naval shipyard. His mother, Gladys (nee Fineberg), who was the daughter of Jewish immigrants from Odessa, used to introduce her son as “Richard, the artist” and was, later, touchingly enthusiast­ic when he began to make his way in New York. Serra himself laboured in steel mills during his time as a student and subsequent­ly, in 1979, made a compelling film, Steelmill/Stahlwerk, about German workers in the industry.

Serra began his studies in 1957 at the University of California in Berkeley, graduating from the institutio­n’s Santa Barbara campus with a degree in English literature. He followed this in 1961 with a three-year course in painting at Yale University, New Haven – a period in which he also worked as a teaching assistant and as a proofreade­r for Joseph Albers’s book Interactio­n of Color (1963). At Yale he encountere­d such luminaries as Philip Guston, Robert Rauschenbe­rg, Ad Reinhardt and Frank Stella, before winning a fellowship that took him to Europe in 1964.

In Paris, Serra was profoundly impressed by the sculpture of Constantin

Brâncuși, but in Florence the following year he continued to paint, producing coloured grids in timed conditions controlled by a stopwatch. It was only with his first exhibition, at the Galleria La Salita in Rome in 1966, that he made a definitive move away from painting, filling cages with live and stuffed animals.

After moving to New York in the same year, Serra initially survived by setting himself up as a furniture remover, together with his friends, the composers Philip Glass and Steve Reich. Serra’s artistic developmen­t at this time was rapid, moving from experiment­s with rubber, fibreglass and neon tubing to the metal sculpture for which he became renowned. He soon began his long-term associatio­n with the Leo Castelli Gallery in New York, in whose Warehouse annex he was photograph­ed in 1969 throwing molten lead at the wall with a ladle.

In the same year Serra refined this procedure by splashing the metal against a small steel plate stuck into the corner of Jasper Johns’s studio. The “castings” produced when the lead cooled down were rough, expressive forms, but this project also inspired Serra to create more impersonal pieces, in which metal sheets were wedged into the angles of rooms, leaned against each other or pinned to the wall by lead pipes. His emphasis on objective phenomena – mass, gravity and other physical forces – can also be seen in his remarkable experiment­al films.

In Hand Catching Lead (1968), the hand is in fact the artist’s but it is shown disembodie­d, trying to grasp rather than cast pieces of falling lead, which it drops or misses altogether. The repetition of this fundamenta­lly pointless act gives the film a serial quality, akin to the celluloid process itself.

Serra’s engagement with the cutting edge also led him to work with the land artists Robert Smithson and Nancy Holt. In 1970 he assisted them with Spiral Jetty at the Great Salt Lake in Utah and, after Smithson’s death in 1973, Serra helped to complete Amarillo Ramp in an artificial lake in Texas. His own site-specific sculptures included Spin Out: For Bob Smithson (1972-73), in the park-like surroundin­gs of the Kröller-Müller Museum at Otterlo in the Netherland­s. Here the three converging steel plates interacted with each other and their environmen­t, exemplifyi­ng Serra’s aim that “the entire space becomes a manifestat­ion of sculpture”.

The 1970s was a difficult decade in Serra’s life. In 1971 a worker was killed in an accident during the installati­on of one of Serra’s sculptures outside the Walker Art Center in Minneapoli­s. His five-year marriage to the artist Nancy Graves ended in 1970, and his mother’s suicide in 1977 was followed two years later by the death of his father. However, in that decade he also met his future wife, the art historian Clara Weyergraf, with whom he collaborat­ed on Steelmill/Stahlwerk. Clara was also to play a vital role in shaping his sculpture, as well as giving her name to ClaraClara, a powerful, curvilinea­r work that was installed in the Tuileries garden in 1983. The history of this piece exemplifie­s Serra’s problems in making sitespecif­ic art, since it was originally intended to feature in a show at the Pompidou Centre, but at a late stage was deemed to be too heavy.

Clara-Clara’s travails were minor in comparison to the controvers­ies surroundin­g Tilted Arc, a sculpture 36 metres long, set up at the Federal Plaza in Manhattan in 1981. Condemned for being intrusive, a magnet for graffiti artists and even a security risk, it was eventually removed in 1989, four years after a public hearing in which a majority of witnesses had advocated its preservati­on.

Despite this setback, Serra’s career continued to flourish. He had two retrospect­ives, in 1986 and 2007, at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, which also devoted a permanent room to his monumental work Equal (2015), as well as major exhibition­s at home and abroad. He showed frequently with his gallery, Gagosian, in London, New York and Paris, most recently in 2021.

In 2001 he received a Golden Lion for lifetime achievemen­t at the Venice Biennale, in 2015 the Légion d’honneur in France and, three years later, the J Paul Getty Medal.

During his latter years, Serra became heavily involved with public projects in Qatar, above all the four steel plates, rising to over 14 metres and spanning more than a kilometre, erected west of Doha in 2014. Known as East-West/West-East, the work engages spectacula­rly with its surroundin­gs, the gypsum plateaux of the Brouq nature reserve in the Dukhan desert. Serra himself described it as “the most fulfilling thing I’ve ever done”.

He is survived by Clara.

• Richard Serra, artist, born 2 November 1938; died 26 March 2024

 ?? ?? Richard Serra with The Matter of Time at the Guggenheim, Bilbao, in 2005. Photograph: Rafa Rivas/AFP/Getty Images
Richard Serra with The Matter of Time at the Guggenheim, Bilbao, in 2005. Photograph: Rafa Rivas/AFP/Getty Images
 ?? ?? East-West/West-East in the Brouq nature reserve, Qatar. Photograph: Nathan Denette/AP
East-West/West-East in the Brouq nature reserve, Qatar. Photograph: Nathan Denette/AP

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