Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Robert Morris’s deceptively simple sculpture Untitled (L-Beams) presents us with a subtle perceptual puzzle. Although its three elements are identical in shape, they appear different from one another based on their varying orientations.

  2. 6 de dic. de 2023 · By placing two eight-foot fiberglass “L-Beams” in a gallery space (often, he showed three), Morris demonstrated that a division existed between our perception of the object and the actual object. While viewers perceived the beams as being different shapes and sizes, in actuality, they were the same shape and of equal size.

  3. By placing two eight-foot fiberglass “L-Beams” in a gallery space (often, he showed three), Morris demonstrated that a division existed between our perception of the object and the actual object. While viewers perceived the beams as being different shapes and sizes, in actuality, they were the same shape and of equal size.

  4. ‘Untitled (L-Beams)’ was created in 1965 by Robert Morris in Minimalism style. Find more prominent pieces of sculpture at Wikiart.org – best visual art database.

  5. Robert Morris: Obras - Todas las Obras por fecha 1→10.

  6. 28 de nov. de 2018 · In the mid-1960s, Morris created some of the key exemplars of Minimalist sculpture: enormous, repeated geometric forms, such as cubes and rectangular beams devoid of figuration, surface texture, or expressive content.

  7. las ya clásicas L- beams (vigas en forma de L) o Columns (columnas), sus obras más asimila-bles al minimalismo de la primera mitad de los sesenta, aludían a una significación ligada es-trechamente al cuerpo, a sus movimientos y a sus gestos, tal como defiende Rosalind Krauss9, una de las más decisivas estudiosas del artista