Wall Drawing 821

Sol LeWitt

Wall Drawing 821

Description

Wall Drawing 821 was created for an exhibit of new work by Sol LeWitt at the Ace Gallery in 1997. This exhibit marked the first time that LeWitt executed wall drawings in paint. Like Wall Drawing 821, all of the drawings in this exhibit were monochrome, and in many LeWitt used varnish to create variations in the surface of the paint.

While the medium used to create Wall Drawing 821 represents a major departure from past wall drawings, the formal content of the work is a continuation of previous ideas. In the drawing LeWitt continued his exploration of lines going in the four basic directions — vertical, horizontal, diagonal left, and diagonal right. This exploration began in the late 1960s in his early drawing series and first wall drawings (which featured different combinations of the four basic types of lines) and continued into LeWitt’s ink wall drawings of the 1980s and early 1990s, in which LeWitt began to use wider bands instead of lines.

Backstory

Wall Drawing 821, like many of LeWitt’s earliest painted wall drawings, was originally executed in latex paint. At MASS MoCA, however, the wall drawing is in acrylic, which the LeWitt studio now uses for all painted wall drawings.

Details

Work Date:
April 1997
Medium:
Acrylic paint
Credit Line:
The Art Institute of Chicago, Through prior gifts of Judith Neisser and Mary and Leigh Block; Norman Waite Harris Purchase Fund, 2006.168