THE ECONOMIST
presented by
Contemporary
Art
Society

 

Tony Smith
Wall 1964
© Tony Smith, Wall, 1964 © Tony Smith, 'The Keys To. Given!', 1965
l: © Tony Smith, Wall, 1964; r: © Tony Smith, The Keys To. Given!, 1965
8 December 2004 - 27 February 2005

Following a recent exhibition at Timothy Taylor Gallery, London, Contemporary Art Society and The Economist Group are pleased to present two monumental sculptural works by one of the most original and influential American artists, Tony Smith.

'Wall' from 1964, an 18-foot long monolith and 'The Keys To. Given!' from 1965, are positioned in the centre of and Jermyn Street entrance to The Economist Plaza at St James's Street. These are two of Tony Smith's most influential sculptures fabricated in the artist's signature black painted steel. 

Smith's art was developed from interests that began as an architect working under Frank Lloyd Wright and his theories formulated since the 1930s with his Abstract Expressionist friends Jackson Pollock, Clifford Still, Mark Rothko and Barnett Newman.

The sculptures are based on modular building systems and complex formulations based on axial symmetry. 'The Keys To.Given!', 1965, began as a plan for a house. But these works are not about architecture; they are about void and mass. 'They may be seen as interruptions in an otherwise unbroken flow of space. If you think of space as solid, they are voids in that space.'

The siting of these works in the Smithson designed Economist Plaza is particularly poignant not only because of their architectural symbiosis but also because the Plaza was built in 1964 and is celebrating its 40th anniversary as is 'Wall'.

Courtesy Timothy Taylor Gallery, London.

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