The China Mail - US sculptor Richard Serra, known for towering minimalism, dies at 85

USD -
AED 3.672503
AFN 66.502261
ALL 83.526602
AMD 382.09034
ANG 1.789982
AOA 917.000023
ARS 1408.524403
AUD 1.528561
AWG 1.8075
AZN 1.70015
BAM 1.68937
BBD 2.014244
BDT 122.111228
BGN 1.687885
BHD 0.376994
BIF 2951.282716
BMD 1
BND 1.30343
BOB 6.910223
BRL 5.295399
BSD 1.000082
BTN 88.671219
BWP 14.25758
BYN 3.410338
BYR 19600
BZD 2.011289
CAD 1.39978
CDF 2200.000266
CHF 0.79709
CLF 0.023807
CLP 933.949837
CNY 7.11965
CNH 7.11187
COP 3707.01
CRC 502.36889
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 95.243648
CZK 20.901997
DJF 177.719536
DKK 6.441401
DOP 64.350898
DZD 130.385995
EGP 47.1997
ERN 15
ETB 154.829729
EUR 0.86254
FJD 2.27645
FKP 0.75922
GBP 0.761045
GEL 2.704965
GGP 0.75922
GHS 10.956112
GIP 0.75922
GMD 73.49843
GNF 8680.892966
GTQ 7.664334
GYD 209.232018
HKD 7.77032
HNL 26.309584
HRK 6.500094
HTG 130.904411
HUF 331.608017
IDR 16742
ILS 3.20022
IMP 0.75922
INR 88.602503
IQD 1310.080633
IRR 42112.505659
ISK 126.789947
JEP 0.75922
JMD 160.817476
JOD 0.709001
JPY 154.582013
KES 129.150163
KGS 87.450236
KHR 4010.486173
KMF 421.000379
KPW 899.988373
KRW 1468.589969
KWD 0.30708
KYD 0.833377
KZT 524.809647
LAK 21709.142578
LBP 89556.406857
LKR 304.582734
LRD 182.514695
LSL 17.149126
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 5.457325
MAD 9.29326
MDL 16.941349
MGA 4488.151229
MKD 53.147795
MMK 2099.257186
MNT 3579.013865
MOP 8.005511
MRU 39.689388
MUR 45.869723
MVR 15.404961
MWK 1734.113033
MXN 18.30125
MYR 4.136503
MZN 63.950171
NAD 17.149126
NGN 1440.597935
NIO 36.805259
NOK 10.078845
NPR 141.874295
NZD 1.765425
OMR 0.384501
PAB 1.000073
PEN 3.369914
PGK 4.223856
PHP 59.1275
PKR 282.76778
PLN 3.65103
PYG 7057.035009
QAR 3.646077
RON 4.385101
RSD 101.064982
RUB 81.273635
RWF 1453.571737
SAR 3.750534
SBD 8.237372
SCR 14.171408
SDG 600.497158
SEK 9.44779
SGD 1.301685
SHP 0.750259
SLE 23.213532
SLL 20969.499529
SOS 570.520379
SRD 38.556496
STD 20697.981008
STN 21.162559
SVC 8.750858
SYP 11056.952587
SZL 17.143474
THB 32.354498
TJS 9.260569
TMT 3.5
TND 2.94953
TOP 2.342104
TRY 42.2346
TTD 6.781462
TWD 31.094994
TZS 2440.000057
UAH 42.073999
UGX 3625.244555
UYU 39.767991
UZS 11972.722129
VES 230.803903
VND 26355
VUV 122.202554
WST 2.815308
XAF 566.596269
XAG 0.018732
XAU 0.000238
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.802343
XDR 0.704774
XOF 566.596269
XPF 103.013263
YER 238.500866
ZAR 17.08726
ZMK 9001.20111
ZMW 22.426266
ZWL 321.999592
  • RBGPF

    0.5700

    78.52

    +0.73%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0500

    14.9

    -0.34%

  • NGG

    0.5150

    77.825

    +0.66%

  • CMSC

    0.1150

    24.085

    +0.48%

  • GSK

    -0.2900

    48.12

    -0.6%

  • AZN

    -1.5200

    87.57

    -1.74%

  • BTI

    0.0550

    55.815

    +0.1%

  • BP

    -0.5350

    36.815

    -1.45%

  • RELX

    -1.0900

    41.39

    -2.63%

  • RIO

    0.9800

    71.3

    +1.37%

  • VOD

    -0.2750

    12.395

    -2.22%

  • SCS

    0.0550

    15.805

    +0.35%

  • CMSD

    0.1400

    24.46

    +0.57%

  • BCC

    0.7800

    70.41

    +1.11%

  • BCE

    -0.4600

    22.95

    -2%

  • JRI

    0.0070

    13.827

    +0.05%

US sculptor Richard Serra, known for towering minimalism, dies at 85
US sculptor Richard Serra, known for towering minimalism, dies at 85 / Photo: © AFP

US sculptor Richard Serra, known for towering minimalism, dies at 85

Contemporary American artist Richard Serra, known for his massive yet minimalist steel sculptures, died Tuesday at age 85, US media reported.

Text size:

His strikingly large pieces are installed all over the world, from Paris museums to the Qatari desert, and have sometimes sparked controversy over their imposing nature.

Serra died of pneumonia Tuesday at his home on Long Island, New York, his lawyer John Silberman told The New York Times.

Born in San Francisco in 1939 to a Spanish father and a mother of Russian Jewish origin, Serra studied English literature at the University of California before going on to study visual arts at Yale.

When asked in an early 2000s interview about what memory from his childhood might suggest who he would become, Serra said: "A little kid walking along the beach for a couple of miles, turning around, looking at his footprints and being amazed at what was on his right one direction, when he reversed himself was now on its left."

He says it "startled him and he never got over it."

His signature giant scale was present in the off-kilter reddish-brown rectangles installed in Paris's Grand Palais for his 2008 "Monumenta" exhibit, and in the swirling and twirling steel plates enveloping visitors in their curves seen in the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain.

Serra, who credited influences from France, Spain and Japan on his artistic style and his evolution from painting to sculpting, moved to New York in the late 1960s, operating a furniture removal business to make ends meet. He even employed the composer Philip Glass as his assistant.

That was also the period in which Serra composed a manifesto detailing the ways he could create a work of art: he listed 84 verbs, such as "roll" and "cut," and 24 elements, including "gravity" and "nature," which he could employ to forge a composition.

Serra did not begin to work predominantly in steel until the 1970s, in an echo of the summer steel mill jobs of his youth.

He designed sculptures specifically for the spaces they were destined to occupy, and said he was interested in examining how his works interacted with their environments.

"Certain things... stick in your imagination, and you have a need to come to terms with them," Serra told US interviewer Charlie Rose in the early 2000s.

"And spatial differences: what's on your right, what's on your left, what it means to walk around a curve, looking at a convexity and then looking at a concavity -- just asking fundamental questions about what you don't understand, those things have always interested me," he said.

That exploration of sculpture in its environment is visible in one of Serra's most controversial works, titled "Tilted Arc," which was installed in New York in 1981.

The 12-foot (4-meter)-high rust-coated metal plate curved its way through the Federal Plaza in Manhattan for 120 feet, set at an angle that made it look like it could topple over at any second. The structure so disturbed local residents that it was removed in 1989 following a long legal battle.

S.Wilson--ThChM