"Over the years I have preferred the title 'sculptor'. I like the groundedness of it, referring back to my early love for the sculpture of Michelangelo, Rodin, and Henry Moore, for example. Early on though, I left the model of such discrete sculptural volumes for a sculpture which became less of a thing-in-itself, more of a diffuse interface between myself, my environment, and others peopling this environment, built of thin lines that left enough room to move through and around. Still sculpture, though less dense, with an ambivalence between exterior and interior. A drawing that is habitable." Fred Sandback, 1998, quoted in "Here and Now: Experiences in Sculpture", Henry Moore Institute, Leeds 1999.
In things he said or wrote, Fred Sandback (1943-2003) never resorted to posturing. He tried to formulate as precisely and clearly as possible what can be said with words. And when he employs the classical label 'sculpture' for his works, this is for good reason. As used in the history of art, the term clarifies which of the traditional attributes are present in Fred's work and those that are absent. Precisely that which could be booked as a loss represents the major achievement of the artist that surpasses conventions and covenants yet does not denounce the connection to the historical inventory. Instead of affirming or negating determined pretensions and requirements, these works open up an interaction with ambivalences that necessitates new courses of conduct and other self-appointed methods of action in order to transfer the indeterminate into the realm of the determinate. The form, the color and the dimensions of the artistic object, for instance, can thus only be defined from the concrete situation, from the existing conditions.
The renewable element – the sculpture – requires inventions and decisions that result in another imperative ensemble of conditions of the possibilities of artistic work to which the artist surrenders himself, as it were.
Form, material and space are placed in relation to one another to make the interdependent elements appear as a complex whole. The physical material of the sculptures, the acrylic yarn, is present, but it literally carries very little weight. The found architectural situation where the work is exhibited becomes part of the work and functions as its premise and prerequisite.
Since 1971, eleven solo exhibitions of Fred Sandback have been held in the spaces of the Annemarie Verna Galerie. The majority of the exhibitions were installed by the artist himself, such as in the 1996 and 2000 shows in the current premises at Neptunstrasse 42. This special legacy that has remained with us and with others as memories, as impressions and vivid experiences is to also be felt in this presentation of sculptures and drawings from the estate. Our thanks go to Amy Baker Sandback for having personally selected the pieces for this exhibition and overseen the installation of the works.
Gianfranco Verna
Installation view room 4
Sketchbook
Installation view room 3
Untitled (Sculptural Study,
Eight-part Horizontal Corner Construction)
ca. 1972/2007
342.9 x 348 x 165 cm
red and black acrylic yarn
FLS2541
Untitled (Sculptural Study,
Eight-part Horizontal Corner Construction)
ca. 1972/2007
342.9 x 348 x 165 cm
red and black acrylic yarn
FLS2541
Untitled (Sculptural Study,
Eight-part Horizontal Corner Construction)
ca. 1972/2007
342.9 x 348 x 165 cm
red and black acrylic yarn
FLS2541
Untitled (Sculptural Study,
Eight-part Horizontal Corner Construction)
ca. 1972/2007
342.9 x 348 x 165 cm
red and black acrylic yarn
FLS2541
Untitled (Triangular Corner Construction)
1991
208 x 182 x 90 cm
white acrylic yarn
FLS2187
Untitled (Triangular Corner Construction)
1991
208 x 182 x 90 cm
white acrylic yarn
FLS2187
Untitled (Triangular Corner Construction)
1991
208 x 182 x 90 cm
white acrylic yarn
FLS2187
Untitled (Cut Drawing)
1993
27.9 x 35.6 cm / 11 x 14 "
incised grey board
FLS0608
Untitled (Cut Drawing)
1995
27.9 x 35.6 cm / 11 x 14 "
incised board
FLS0613
Untitled
1991
24.1 x 30.5 cm / 9.5 x 12 "
pastel on mylar
FLS0331
Untitled
1990
21.6 x 27.9 cm / 8.5 x 11 "
pastel on vellum
FLS0204
Untitled
1991
204.5 x 241 cm
light blue acrylic yarn
FLS8524
Untitled
1982
33.9 x 24 cm / 13 x 9.5 "
grey pastel on sketchbook paper
FLS0868
Untitled
1982
33.9 x 24 cm / 13 x 9.5 "
grey pastel on sketchbook paper
FLS0867
Untitled
1991
24.1 x 30.5 cm / 9.5 x 12 "
colored pencil on vellum
FLS0050
Untitled (Sculptural Study,
Four part Vertical Construction)
ca. 2000/2007
floor to ceiling x 334 cm
red acrylic yarn
FLS2592
Untitled (Sculptural Study,
Four part Vertical Construction)
ca. 2000/2007
floor to ceiling x 334 cm
red acrylic yarn
FLS2592
Untitled (Sculptural Study,
Four part Vertical Construction)
ca. 2000/2007
floor to ceiling x 334 cm
red acrylic yarn
FLS2592
Untitled
1994
25.4 x 39.4 cm / 10 x 15.5 "
graphite, pastel on museum board
FLS0056
Untitled
1990
21.6 x 27.9 cm / 8.5 x 11 ″
pastel and pencil on yellow paper
FLS0236
Untitled (Cut Drawing)
1994
38.1 x 50.8 cm / 15 x 20 ″
incised illustration board
FLS0023
Untitled
2000
21.6 x 27.9 cm / 8.5 x 11 ″
pastel pencil and pencil on yellow paper
FLS0182
Richard Tuttle
50 Years of Collaboration
September 25 to November 30, 2024
Glen Rubsamen
The Petrified Forest
Publisher: Glen Rubsamen
INSIGHT #3 spotlights the graphic work of Fred Sandback through three examples from 1974 and 1982.
Rita McBride, Momentum,
Dia Beacon, Beacon, NY,
July 1, 2023 to January 2025
Ree Morton with Natalie Häusler,
To Each Concrete Man,
Kunstmuseum Bochum, Germany
October 11, 2024, to February 23, 2025
Sol LeWitt (1928–2007)
A Wall Drawing Retrospective
Yale University Art Gallery and Williams College Museum of Art
November 16, 2008 – 2033