Oral Histories
Interview of Robert Irwin (1975)
Light-and-space artist and creator of site-specific works.
- Subtitle:
- Los Angeles Art Community: Group Portrait, Robert Irwin
- Series:
- Los Angeles Art Community - Group Portrait
- Topic:
- Art
- Biographical Note:
- Light-and-space artist and creator of site-specific works.
- Interviewee:
- Irwin, Robert
- Supporting Documents:
- Records relating to the interview are located in the office of the UCLA Library's Center for Oral History Research.
- Length:
- 7 hrs.
- Language:
- English
- Copyright:
- Regents of the University of California, UCLA Library.
- Series Statement:
- This series includes interviews with prominent Los Angeles-based visual artists and other members of the art establishment whose careers span the period from the 1920s through the 1970s. It documents the art community of the pre-World War II period and the rise of Los Angeles as a nationally recognized art center in the postwar period. Funding for this series was provided by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities.
- Abstract:
- Childhood in Southern California; lack of early aesthetic influences; study at Otis Art Institute; contact with Ferus Gallery group; Felix Landau Gallery show, 1957; influence of Billy Al Bengston, Craig Kauffman; early line paintings; Los Angeles artists; gradual discernment of visual laws; nature of abstract expressionism; dot paintings; teaching at Chouinard Art Institute and University of California, Irvine; escape from rectangular canvases; discs and their lighting; experiments after work with discs; art as open inquiry; aftereffects of Museum of Modern Art installation; desert projects; show at UCLA Art Gallery; "Art and Technology" project, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 1968-70; work with Ed Wortz; inquiry into perception as solitary enterprise; proximity of science and art; show at Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, 1975; dealing with space as sculpture; projects with Fort Worth Art Center, Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, and Whitney Museum of American Art.