Conceptual Art vs Greenberg: clash in means, not the ends

Lawrence Weiner, As Long As It Lasts, 1992. Visual statement.

Lawrence Weiner, As Long As It Lasts, 1992. Visual statement.

“Ideas alone can be works of art,”[1] proclaimed American Minimalist artist Sol LeWitt in his 1968 Sentences on Conceptual Art, summoning up a new stream of thought that emerged in 1960s America[2] as a reaction to Clement Greenberg’s insistence on formalism and opticality, a stance that art should be experienced solely through ‘visual stimuli’ and in a disinterested manner.[3] In an anarchic Dada style,[4] Conceptual Art (as this new stream came to be known) proposed “perceptual withdrawal”[5] – instead of producing ‘sacred’ and valuable art objects, they offered only brief linguistic description of their ideas or simple visual statements such as Lawrence Weiner’s As Long As It Lasts (Figure 1). If a physical object of some sort was present it was either perplexingly bare or badly executed and aesthetically unappealing. What is more, these artworks mixed a variety of media (including everyday objects and all sorts of rubbish), thus attacking Greenberg’s “quest for medium-specific purity.”[6] Purposefully provocative, conceptual artworks encouraged a renewed enquiry into what art is or should be.

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Can ideas be beautiful?

Following in the footsteps of Conceptual Art pioneers and their predecessor ‘provocateur par excellence’ Marcel Duchamp, Stefan Brüggemann’s works offer intellectual rather than aesthetic stimuli, spurring zealous philosophical debate — ‘Is this art?’

Stefan Brüggemann, ‘I can’t explain and I won't even try’, 2003.

Stefan Brüggemann, I can’t explain and I won’t even try, 2003

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Ed Ruscha honors Lawrence Weiner

Ed Ruscha honors his friend and fellow artist Lawrence Weiner. He created a three-minute tribute in the form of a parody of Bob Dylan’s legendary music video for “Subterranean Homesick Blues” with placards featuring Weiner text pieces. The mash-up soundtrack is sung by Ruscha himself. See it here.

Ed Ruscha honors his friend and fellow artist Lawrence Weiner. He created a three-minute tribute in the form of a parody of Bob Dylan’s legendary music video for “Subterranean Homesick Blues” with placards featuring Weiner text pieces. The mash-up soundtrack is sung by Ruscha himself. See it here.