Carl Andre, 2 new additions
Born in the granite-crusted soil of Quincy, Massachusetts, in 1935, Carl Andre emerged as a sculptural iconoclast, shedding the pretensions of high art like a snake sloughing its winter skin. His trajectory was forged not in the sterile vacuum of the academy, but amidst the industrial grit of gear works and the rhythmic, iron-lunged roar of the Pennsylvania Railroad, where he served as a brakesman. These years amidst the switchbacks proved seminal; the utilitarian cadence of locomotives bled into his aesthetic, transmuted into the rigid geometry of his later output. Andre’s transition from the gestural—his nascent poems and ethereal perspex incisions—to the tectonic was absolute. Influenced profoundly by the stripped-down essence of Brancusi and the chromatic austerity of his confidant, Frank Stella, Andre redirected his focus. Carving became anachronism; construction, his new … Read more