Judd

Publisher: The Museum of Modern Art, New York

Publish Date: 2020

Edited with text by Ann Temkin. Text by Erica Cooke, Tamar Margalit, Christine Mehring, James Meyer, Annie Ochmanek, Yasmil Raymond, and Jeffrey Weiss

Published to accompany the first US retrospective exhibition of Donald Judd’s sculpture in more than thirty years, Judd explores the work of a landmark artist who, over the course of his career, developed a material and formal vocabulary that transformed the field of modern sculpture.

Donald Judd was among a generation of artists in the 1960s who sought to entirely do away with illusion, narrative, and metaphorical content. Judd surveys the evolution of his work, beginning with his paintings, reliefs, and handmade objects from the early 1960s; through the years in which he built an iconic vocabulary of works in three dimensions, including hollow boxes, stacks, and progressions made with metals and plastics by commercial fabricators; and continuing through his extensive engagement with color during the last decade of his life. This richly illustrated catalogue takes a close look at Judd’s achievements, and using newly available archival materials at the Judd Foundation and elsewhere, expands scholarly perspectives on his work. Essays by curators and scholars address subjects such as his early beginnings in painting, the fabrication of his sculptures, his site-specific pieces, and his work in design and architecture.

Details

Publisher: The Museum of Modern Art, New York

Artist: Donald Judd

Contributors: Ann Temkin, Erica Cooke, Tamar Margalit, Chirstine Mehring, James Meyer, Annie Ochmanek, Yasmil Raymond, Jeffrey Weiss

Publication Date: 2020

ISBN: 9781633450325

Retail: $75 | £60 | €70

Status: Not Available

Binding: Hardcover

Dimensions: 9 x 10.5 in | 22.9 x 26.7 cm

Pages: 304

Reproductions: 300 color

Artist and Contributors

Donald Judd

With the intention of creating straightforward work that could assume a direct material and physical “presence” without recourse to grand philosophical statements, Donald Judd (1928–1994) eschewed the classical ideals of representational sculpture to create a rigorous visual vocabulary that sought clear and definite objects as its primary mode of articulation.

Ann Temkin

Erica Cooke

Tamar Margalit

Chirstine Mehring

James Meyer

Annie Ochmanek

Yasmil Raymond

Jeffrey Weiss

Jeffrey Weiss is senior curator at the Guggenheim museum. He joined the museum in 2010 as curator of the Panza Collection. Weiss holds a Ph.D. from the Institute of Fine Arts, New York. From 2000 to 2007, he was Curator and Head of Modern and Contemporary Art at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. In 2007–08, he served as Director of the Dia Art Foundation, but left to return to academic and curatorial work. Since that time he has also been Adjunct Professor of Fine Art at the Institute of Fine Arts, a position he currently retains. At the National Gallery, Weiss organized exhibitions concerning the work of Jasper Johns, Pablo Picasso, and Mark Rothko. He also greatly expanded the museum’s holdings in art of the 1960s and 1970s. Widely published in various periodicals on modern and postwar art, Weiss’s writings are regularly featured in Artforum. In 2006, he edited Dan Flavin: New Light, an anthology of essays from Yale University Press.

$75