Richard Serra

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Richard Serra - Source: combustion.wsRichard Serra - Source: commons.wikimedia.orgRichard Serra - Source: rlhagopian.wordpress.comRichard Serra - Source: www.sashapetrenko.orgRichard Serra - Source: mesmertron.files.wordpress.comRichard Serra - Source: commons.wikimedia.orgRichard Serra - Source: www.flickr.com/photos/kaszeta/Richard Serra - Source: commons.wikimedia.orgRichard Serra - Source: www.guardian.co.ukRichard Serra - Scluptor, Richard Serra, Vortex 2002

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  • Richard Serra - Source: combustion.ws
  • Richard Serra - Source: commons.wikimedia.org
  • Richard Serra - Source: rlhagopian.wordpress.com
  • Richard Serra - Source: www.sashapetrenko.org
  • Richard Serra - Source: mesmertron.files.wordpress.com
  • Richard Serra - Source: commons.wikimedia.org
  • Richard Serra - Source: www.flickr.com/photos/kaszeta/
  • Richard Serra - Source: commons.wikimedia.org
  • Richard Serra - Source: www.guardian.co.uk
  • Richard Serra - Scluptor,
  • Richard Serra, Vortex 2002

Richard Serra

Born: 1939 San Francisco

After studying at the University of California at Berkeley and at Santa Barbara, Serra graduated in 1961 with a BA in English literature. During this time, he began working in steel mills in order to support himself. In 1964, he graduated from Yale University with both a BFA and an MFA. Receiving a Yale Traveling Fellowship, he spent a year in Paris, followed by a year in Florence funded by a Fullbright grant. Serra’s early work in the 1960s focused on the industrial materials that he had worked with as a youth in West Coast steel mills and shipyards: steel and lead. A famous work from this time involved throwing lead against the walls of his studio. Though his casts were created from the impact of the lead hitting the walls, the emphasis of the piece was really on the process of creating it: raw aggression and physicality, combined with a self-conscious awareness of material and a real engagement with the space in which it was worked. Since those Minimalist beginnings, Serra’s work has become famous for that same physicality, but one that is now compounded by the breathtaking size and weight that the pieces have acquired. His series of “Torqued Ellipses” (1996–99), which comprise gigantic plates of towering steel, bent and curved, leaning in and out, carve very private spaces from the necessarily large public sites in which they have been erected. Serra’s most recent public work includes the 60-foot-tall “Charlie Brown” (1999; named for the Peanuts comic-strip character in honor of its author, Charles Schulz, who had died that year), which has been erected in the courtyard of an office building in San Francisco. He lives in New York and Nova Scotia.

Source: www.pbs.org

 

Richard Serra at MoMA - Band (2006)

Source: www.youtube.com

 

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