
Carl Andre (born 1935) the American minimalist artist is perhaps best known for his grid-based floor sculptures but also for large outdoor public artworks & small sculptures poetry & installations. Alistair Rider here shows that it is the materials that he uses to make his works that inspire him
- from his controversial bricks to all sorts of metals found wood even hay bales Andre is fascinated by what materials make up the world & presents them for contemplation. Andre's early wood sculptures show the influence of Brancusi who he had met through their mutual friend Hollis Frampton when a student in the early 1950s. Then towards the end of that decade he shared a studio with Frank Stella & their conversations led to rapid development in his work when he began using a radial saw to shape his sculptures. Between 1960-4 Andre worked as freight brakeman & conductor in New Jersey for the Pennsylvania Railroad & focused mainly on writing including his poems in the tradition of Concrete Poetry that makes visual use of the words on the page. His experiences working on the freight trains would have a later influence on Andre's sculpture in ordered organization & his artistic personality
- it was not uncommon for Andre to dress in overalls & a blue work shirt even to attend formal occasions. His most well known writings were published in 1980 in a book called 12 Dialogues in which Andre & Frampton took turns responding to one another at a typewriter using mainly poetry & free-form essay-like texts. Andre's Concrete Poetry has exhibited in the USA & Europe a comprehensive collection of which is in the collection of the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam. His first public exhibition of work was in 1965 in the ' Shape & Structure' show curated by Henry Geldzahler at the Tibor de Nagy Gallery & in 1966 his controversial Lever was included in the important exhibition at the Jewish Museum in New York Primary Structures. In 1970 he had a solo exhibition at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum & has had one man exhibitions & participated in group shows in major museums & galleries throughout the USA & Europe. His work features in many important collections including the UK's Tate which bought Equivalent VIII in 1972 & a few years later was the inspiration for much public controversy over the nature of contemporary art. He is now represented by the Paula Cooper Gallery in New York by Sadie Coles HQ in London & Yvon Lambert Gallery in Paris & lives & works in New York. Alistair Rider here divides Andre's works into the major themes & series that have shaped his career's development exploring how each has grown from Andre's philosophies & artistic growth. For the first time Andre's poetry is given due place in his oeuvre making this a uniquely comprehensive understanding of the artist & his art.