Looking at Donald Judd
Written by Lenny Campello
Published September 20, 2004
Published September 20, 2004
Blake Gopnik, writing all the way from London, delivers a superb review and an art lesson history with his review of the Donald Judd retrospective at the Tate.
Why didn't this show come to America?
This paragraph from the review is how I've always seen Judd's work:
"Describe the [Judd] piece and it sounds terribly, even ridiculously simple. It can even sound like some conceptual-art trick meant to test precisely how little it takes to make an object count as art — Judd's sculpture sometimes gets billed as working like Marcel Duchamp's urinal, only using objects even less inviting to the eye. But experience the work in person, and things get much more complex than that. "An yet, by the time Gopnik finishes the review, he's actually convinced me that I've been looking at Judd's work completely wrong all these years!
I won't blow the ending... read the review here.
And in order to see how art criticism can differ, you should also the Adrian Searle review in The Guardian.
The retrospective was curated by Tate director Nicholas Serota, a Judd fan since 1970. Read his viewpoint from a fan's point of view, here.
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- Looking at Donald Judd
- Published: September 20, 2004
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- Section: Culture
- Writer: Lenny Campello
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