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Robert Irwin, pioneering creator of light and experiential art, has died aged 95

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Robert Irwin, a pioneering figure in the Californian Light and Space movement, and a hugely influential maker of experiential, minimal, sometimes site-specific and often temporary works, has died, aged 95. Irwin’s death, at Scripps Memorial Hospital, was caused by heart failure, according to Arne Glimcher, the founder and chairman of the international Pace Gallery, which has represented the artist since 1966.“In my long career, I have been privileged to work with some of the greatest artists of the 20th century and develop deep friendships with them,” Glimcher said, “but none greater or closer than Robert Irwin. In our 57-year relationship, his art and philosophy have extended my perception, shaped my taste, and made me realise what art could be.” Irwin latterly contributed noted large-scale design work for gallery and landscape spaces for museums including the Getty Museum in Los Angeles (1997), where he designed the terraces and gardens, circles within circles of tightly knotted topiaryu, around Richard Meier’s sprawling new hilltop building, and Dia:Beacon (2005) in upper New York State. In 2017, the Chinati Foundation in Marfa, Texas, opened untitled (dawn to dusk), his first freestanding structure. It was 17 years in conception and saw Irwin—in his mid-eighties by the time it was opened—transform a former army hospital on Chinati’s campus into a 10,000 sq. ft, horseshoe-shaped installation that progresses from light to dark. Windows installed at eye level reveal a thin strip of landscape and a vast expanse of the Texan sky.Robert Irwin (left), and Arne Glimcher, founder and chairman of the international Pace Gallery, 2022 Courtesy Pace GalleryThe loosely aligned Light and Space movement—the Golden State’s own art school, whose main proponents included Irwin and James Turrell, and which developed around a very 1960s Californian focus on space and transcendence—found its name when the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) hosted Transparency, Reflection, Light, Space: Four Artists (1971), featuring the work of Irwin, Peter Alexander, Larry Bell and Craig Kauffman. Forty years later the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego presented a landmark survey of the movement, Phenomenal: California Light, Space, Surface (2011).Irwin’s works with light break down in to two main types, those that manage natural light—sometimes through window openings, sometimes through the subtlest of net-like scrims—and installations built on fluorescence. At the 1971 UCLA show, Irwin’s stairwell installation had been “activated . . . perceptually with as little event or object as possible”. Irwin’s piece, Peter Plagens wrote in Artforum, “is by far the most ambitious work, because in this crowd it is the least material (material meaning ‘gear’ or ‘glass’ or ‘plastic’) and takes the most chances: the dense, translucent net fitted over the staircase to divert the changing sunlight, gives one almost nothing, and demands the viewer work for sensation.”The “dense, translucent” net of Irwin’s 1971 stairwell became a calling card in some of his grandest, but most minimal pieces. An archetypical such work is his Black rectangle—Natural light (1977), created for the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York. In 2013 Donna De Salvo, chief curator and deputy director for programmes at the Whitney, told The Art Newspaper that the highlight of her year had been “The honour of ­working with Robert Irwin on the re-installation of his Scrim veil—Black rectangle—Natural light… 36 years after it was first presented at the Whitney.” The sometimes ephemeral nature of Irwin‘s work was emphasised by the fact that the installation came down again when the museum left its Marcel Breuer-designed home on the corner of Madison Avenue and 75th Street just over a year later, and moved downtown to a new building in Gansevoort Street.Robert Irwin, Full Room Skylight–Scrim V–Dia Beacon (1972/2022) at Dia:Beacon, New York State ©Dia Art Foundation. Photo: Bill Jacobson Studio, New York. Courtesy Dia Art FoundationIrwin’s untitled (dawn to dusk) at the Chinati Foundation was an exemplar of his work with light and apertures, as was his first permanent museum installation, 1° 2° 3° 4° (1997), for the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego (where he was an artist in residence), set in the museum’s oceanview gallery. The work’s title refers to four dimensions, height, width, depth and time; time being aligned with the movement of the sun, as it plays on three rectangles cut in the gallery’s tinted windows (lighter blue against darker blue), through which the sea-breeze blows. It is an experiential space, at once playful and profound.One of Irwin’s largest fluorescent works is Light and Space (2007), a permanent installation at The Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, made up of 115 lighting tubes. Light artists interviewed by The Art Newspaper for a recent article on light and technology, almost universally cited Irwin as an important contemporary influence. To Hannes Koch, co-founder of the European collaborative studio Random International, it was “always Robert Irwin”. And that influence came not just from Irwin’s celebrated use of light, but from his study of perception—the artist‘s and the viewer‘s—and of using that experiential register to involve his audience, effortlessly and instinctively, in his works.Irwin was born in Long Beach, south of Los Angeles, the son of a shipyard worker and served in the US military in Europe before returning to the West Coast where, from 1948, he studied at three art schools: Otis Art Institute, the Jepson and the Chouinard, now CalArts. On a return trip to Europe in the mid 1950s he toured museums, studying the Old Masters and—almost on a whim—took a boat to Ibiza, in the Balearic Islands, then a sleepy, bohemian idyll. There he had his first encounter with (self)-perception, spending, like some accidental Desert Father, eight months alone in an isolated cottage, conversing with no one. It was, he later said, a decisive moment in his formation as an artist. “I realised I was in the 20th century,” he later told his friend and biographer Lawrence Weschler. “And I wasn’t at all interested in historical forms.”Robert Irwin, White Drawing (2008-2009 installation, with fluorescent lamps and electrical tape © Robert Irwin / Artists Rights Society (ARS)Back in Los Angeles Irwin practised his own form of Abstract Expressionism and held a one-man show at the Felix Landau Gallery in 1957, while still searching for his ultimate métier. Los Angeles was affluent but conservative in the 1950s, without an established art scene, but Irwin benefited from his connection with the ground-breaking Ferus Gallery in Venice Beach, founded by Walter Hopps in 1957, which helped establish the reputations of Irwin (who joined the gallery in 1958), and other equally and fiercely independent artists such as Robert Kienholz, Billy Al Bengston and Ed Ruscha.In the 1960s, Irwin made his individual mark as an artist with his spot paintings and his aluminium and acrylic disc pieces—which stand out from the wall creating shadows as part of the gallery display—and in the 1970s with his landmark light installations. He first exhibited with Pace in 1966, presenting his dot paintings at the gallery’s West 57th Street space in New York, and featured in some 20 further solo shows with the gallery, maintaining a close friendship with Glimcher for almost 60 years. In 1969 Irwin engaged in another memorable phase of his experiential voyage when the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (Lacma) invited him to work on sensory deprivation with Turrell and the perceptual scientist Edward Wortz of the Garrett Aerospace Corporation. Turrell withdrew from the experiment before it was complete but Irwin took copious notes. “I feel, therefore I think, therefore I am,” he once said.Robert Irwin, untitled (dawn to dusk), 2016, at the permanent collection, the Chinati Foundation, Marfa, Texas © 2023 Robert Irwin / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. Photo by Alex Marks, courtesy of The Chinati Foundation. The British-born dealer Peter Goulds, founder director of the Louver Gallery in Venice Beach, told The Art Newspaper in 2011 how in the 1970s, Irwin was to be found at the centre of ”the dialogue in the studios of Venice… animated, artist-led meetings with collectors and curators… held in the studios of Robert Irwin, Larry Bell and Sam Francis.”Apart from a period spent in Las Vegas, Irwin remained a Californian, living and working in Los Angeles and San Diego. The opening of the Getty Museum in December 1997 was a very personal homecoming, as the complex is sited just a short distance south of one of Irwin’s childhood homes in Los Angeles. Shortly before opening of the museum, and Irwin’s central garden, Irwin told The Art Newspaper that he felt optimistic: “I find it interesting that the Getty, which is identified with and committed up to its balls in antiquities and other periods of time, is the first one that’s having a serious dialogue with me. Harold Williams [founding president and CEO of the J. Paul Getty Trust.] is the biggest populist walking around this part of the world. It’s the dead opposite of what you think it is. And if the place is well administered, it’s an incredible boon.”His Primal Palm Garden, a courtyard piece at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (Lacma) installed between 2010 and 2016, has become a city landmark.Irwin famously abandoned his studio practice in the 1970s, but in the past decade, while continuing to work on large site-specific pieces, he had returned to the studio, to develop new forms of sculpture, using fluorescent light and acrylic, such as the Sculpture/Configuration pieces (2018) and his Unlight series (2020 and 2022), all shown at Pace in New York.Irwin speaks of the sometimes-ephemeral nature of his work in a new documentary, Robert Irwin: A Desert of Pure Feeling, which has been available on streaming services since 20 October and is to be presented today at the ICA in London. “If I say to you, you can make something and it is going to be so beautiful, the best thing you’ve ever done. Only one problem, it’s only going to last for 20 minutes…”Weschler published the first edition of an acclaimed biography, Seeing is Forgetting the Name of the Thing One Sees: A Life of Contemporary Artist Robert Irwin, in 1982, based on a series of long-form articles for the New Yorker magazine; and an expanded edition in 2009, the fruit of thirty years of conversations with Irwin.Irwin’s work is at present on view at Pace’s London gallery as part of the two-artist presentation Robert Irwin and Mary Corse: Parallax.Robert Walter Irwin, born Long Beach California 12 September 1928; John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation fellowship 1984; member, American Academy of Arts and Letters 2007; married 1956 Nancy Olsburg (marriage dissolved); died La Jolla, San Diego, California 25 October 2023.

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