1. donjudd:

the moon over 15 untitled works in concrete, 1980-1984
via: lalanguedesoiseaux

    donjudd:

    the moon over 15 untitled works in concrete, 1980-1984

    via: lalanguedesoiseaux

  2. (Source: youtube.com)

  3. Donald Judd on Jean Arp:

    “Arp’s work is nearly always good, and so the exhibition is. […] One of the interesting aspects of sculpture, and a relevant one currently, is that a good piece is a whole which has no parts. The protuberances can never clearly be considered other, smaller units; even partially disengaged sections are kept from being secondary units within or adding up to a larger one. This lack of distinct parts forces you to see the piece as a whole.“

    — http://www.fineartpartners.com/press_article_5.html

  4. “In the summer there are twelve cottonwoods around the pool, which in the winter become an elevated thicket. There is also a courtyard with a small garden of plants that stay green all year. The winter is bleak. This place is primarily for the installation of art, necessarily for whatever architecture of my own that can be included in an existing situation, for work, and altogether for my idea of living.”
-Donald Judd

    “In the summer there are twelve cottonwoods around the pool, which in the winter become an elevated thicket. There is also a courtyard with a small garden of plants that stay green all year. The winter is bleak. This place is primarily for the installation of art, necessarily for whatever architecture of my own that can be included in an existing situation, for work, and altogether for my idea of living.”

    -Donald Judd

  5. Donald Judd Remix.

    Donald Judd Remix.

  6. Donald Judd Remix
http://vickyaclark.com/judd_remix.html
http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/ae/s_732081.html

    Donald Judd Remix

    http://vickyaclark.com/judd_remix.html

    http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/ae/s_732081.html

  7. “Or, is the Goldberg show yet another example of the popular, vulture-like practice of taking certain elements from well-known texts and building whole shows from them, disregarding the literary carcass from which it came?”
http://idiommag.com/2010/03/unspecific-specificities-objects-at-thierry-goldberg/

    “Or, is the Goldberg show yet another example of the popular, vulture-like practice of taking certain elements from well-known texts and building whole shows from them, disregarding the literary carcass from which it came?”

    http://idiommag.com/2010/03/unspecific-specificities-objects-at-thierry-goldberg/