The Borneo Post

US sculptor Richard Serra, known for towering minimalism, dies at 85

- — AFP file photo

NEW YORK: Contempora­ry American artist Richard Serra, known for his massive yet minimalist steel sculptures, died Tuesday at age 85, US media reported.

His strikingly large pieces are installed all over the world, from Paris museums to the Qatari desert, and have sometimes sparked controvers­y over their imposing nature.

Serra died of pneumonia Tuesday at his home on Long Island, New York, his lawyer John Silberman told The New York Times.

Born in San Francisco in 1939 to a Spanish father and a mother of Russian Jewish origin, Serra studied English literature at the University of California before going on to study visual arts at Yale.

When asked in an early 2000s interview about what memory from his childhood might suggest who he would become, Serra said: “A little kid walking along the beach for a couple of miles, turning around, looking at his footprints and being amazed at what was on his right one direction, when he reversed himself was now on its left.”

He says it “startled him and he never got over it.”

His signature giant scale was present in the off-kilter reddishbro­wn rectangles installed in Paris’s Grand Palais for his 2008 “Monumenta” exhibit, and in the swirling and twirling steel plates enveloping visitors in their curves seen in the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain.

Serra, who credited influences from France, Spain and Japan on his artistic style and his evolution from painting to sculpting, moved to New York in the late 1960s, operating a furniture removal business to make ends meet. He even employed the composer Philip Glass as his assistant.

That was also the period in which Serra composed a manifesto detailing the ways he could create a work of art: he listed 84 verbs, such as “roll” and “cut,” and 24 elements, including “gravity” and “nature,” which he could employ to forge a compositio­n.

Serra did not begin to work predominan­tly in steel until the 1970s, in an echo of the summer steel mill jobs of his youth.

He designed sculptures specifical­ly for the spaces they were destined to occupy, and said he was interested in examining how his works interacted with their environmen­ts.

“Certain things... stick in your imaginatio­n, and you have a need to come to terms with them,” Serra told US interviewe­r Charlie Rose in the early 2000s.

“And spatial difference­s: what’s on your right, what’s on your left, what it means to walk around a curve, looking at a convexity and then looking at a concavity – just asking fundamenta­l questions about what you don’t understand, those things have always interested me,” he said.

That exploratio­n of sculpture in its environmen­t is visible in one of Serra’s most controvers­ial works, titled “Tilted Arc,” which was installed in New York in 1981.

The 12-foot (4-meter)-high rustcoated metal plate curved its way through the Federal Plaza in Manhattan for 120 feet, set at an angle that made it look like it could topple over at any second. The structure so disturbed local residents that it was removed in 1989 following a long legal battle.

 ?? ?? Serra reacts as he arrives to attend the Prince of Asturias Award 2010 ceremony at the Campoamor Theater, on Oct 22, 2010, in the northern Spanish city of Oviedo.
Serra reacts as he arrives to attend the Prince of Asturias Award 2010 ceremony at the Campoamor Theater, on Oct 22, 2010, in the northern Spanish city of Oviedo.

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