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Richard Serra
(b. 1939)
Richard
Serra was born in San Francisco in 1939. His studies have
included the University of California, Berkeley and Santa
Barbara, and Yale University where he received his M.F.A.
He later traveled to Paris and Italy where he was given his
first solo exhibition at Galleria La Salita, Rome, in 1966.
Later that year, he moved to New York, where his circle of
friends included Carl Andre, Walter De Maria, Eva Hesse, Sol
LeWitt, and Robert Smithson.
Serra is known for his work as a minimalist sculptor. He
creates large-scale minimalist works, often intended for specific
outdoor sites. In the early 1960's, Serra mainly worked with
the industrial materials, steel and lead. In the latter part
of the decade, he turned to more nontraditional materials
such as fiberglass and rubber. Serra later became more concerned
with the cutting, propping or stacking of lead sheets, rough
timber, etc., to create structures, some very large, supported
only by their own weight. Balance, the character of the material,
and the emphasis on the process of making became central topics
for Serra.
Serra's works are in private collections the world over as
well as museum collections at the Museum of Modern Art, New
York, the Whitney Museum, New York, The Guggenheim Museum,
New York, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, and many other
public collections. He has been honored with solo exhibitions
and retrospectives at museums such as the Musée National d'Art
Moderne, Paris, the Museum of Modern Art, New York, and the
Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Madrid, and galleries
such as the Leo Castelli Gallery and Gagosian Gallery, New
York. He continues to produce large-scale steel structures
for sites both in the United States and Europe. He lives outside
of New York and in Nova Scotia.
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