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San Antonio Museum of Art presents Larry Bell: "Improvisations"

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Larry Bell, Triolith (Poppy/Hibiscus) A, 2020. Laminated glass coated with Inconel, 12 x 24 x 12 in. Larry Bell Studio, Courtesy of the Sarlo Collection.

Larry Bell: "Improvisations" celebrates the artistic achievements of one of the most influential and renowned artists who emerged from the Los Angeles art scene in the 1960s. An experimental artist from the start, Bell - born in Chicago in 1939 - has dedicated his career to exploring themes of light and surface by transforming industrial materials into physical realities.

The exhibition, originated by the Phoenix Art Museum, includes works created between 1969 and 2024 in various media ranging from intimately scaled collages to Bell’s signature floating glass cubes and monumental glass wall installations. The selected works demonstrate Bell’s ongoing innovations with industrial materials and processes.

In the 1960s Bell discovered a vacuum deposition technique using a tank, or chamber, that allowed him to transfer thin film deposits onto glass panes. The resulting sculptures and installations enhance the elusiveness of space by allowing light to pass through and feature metallic coatings that create subtle optical shifts. Bell has since been using light as his medium to focus on how different surfaces reflect, absorb, and transmit light.

Larry Bell: "Improvisations" celebrates the artistic achievements of one of the most influential and renowned artists who emerged from the Los Angeles art scene in the 1960s. An experimental artist from the start, Bell - born in Chicago in 1939 - has dedicated his career to exploring themes of light and surface by transforming industrial materials into physical realities.

The exhibition, originated by the Phoenix Art Museum, includes works created between 1969 and 2024 in various media ranging from intimately scaled collages to Bell’s signature floating glass cubes and monumental glass wall installations. The selected works demonstrate Bell’s ongoing innovations with industrial materials and processes.

In the 1960s Bell discovered a vacuum deposition technique using a tank, or chamber, that allowed him to transfer thin film deposits onto glass panes. The resulting sculptures and installations enhance the elusiveness of space by allowing light to pass through and feature metallic coatings that create subtle optical shifts. Bell has since been using light as his medium to focus on how different surfaces reflect, absorb, and transmit light.

WHEN

WHERE

San Antonio Museum of Art
200 W Jones Ave, San Antonio, TX 78215, USA
https://www.samuseum.org/artwork/exhibition/larry-bell-improvisations/

TICKET INFO

Free-$22

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