Posting documents, images, news and information related to my artistic research and process

Sol LeWitt "Wall Drawings" and the set of instructions that constitute the body of his work.



“The idea becomes the machine that makes the art” 
Sol LeWitt


Instead of creating a single wall mural, Sol LeWitt created instructions on how to create what he called “wall drawings” so that they would be reproducible and could be created by a collaborative team of skilled artists or fabricators.  He fully explored in his works the relationship between the idea and the final product, between outlining the concept and fully defining the work.  In one of his essays he says “The system* is the work of art; the visual work of art is the proof of the system. The visual aspect can't be understood without understanding the system. It isn't what it looks like but what it is that is of basic importance”.

*View previous post "Systems Esthetics"








To that, when an organization or individual buys a LeWitt wall drawing, they receive two things, neither of which is the finished work of art. They get a certificate of authenticity and a detailed set of instructions—that is, they get the idea. To install the piece, they worked directly with LeWitt and now, since his death in 2007, work with LeWitt’s estate to hire one of his trained drafts-people to lead the installation. 
























A fundamental component of the wall drawings is that LeWitt need not be present to install, then it did not matter to the outcome of the installation that LeWitt was no longer alive. In a process much like the relationship between a conductor and a group of musicians, a trained LeWitt draftsperson directs a team of workers to create the installation using the instructions as the “score.”

In Lewitt’s words, “an architect doesn’t go off with a shovel and dig his foundation and lay every brick. He’s still an artist”.  A Sol Lewitt wall drawing begins as a small sketch, and then Lewitt writes directions for completing the piece, the rest is up to the draftsman. Human error and interpretation affect the piece, making sure that no two wall drawings are ever exactly the same. Lewitt believed that “Ideas cannot be owned…they belong to whomever understands them”, and allowed others to reproduce his works as long as they closely followed his instruction.  However after the 1980’s, poor copies of his work began to circulate through the art world and he established a system of certificates. For a wall drawing to be considered a Sol Lewitt, it must be completed under the supervision of an assistant and be accompanied by a drawing and instructions certified by Sol Lewitt. The certificate system assured Lewitt that all his pieces would be of the highest quality.


His first wall drawing was executed in 1968 at the Paula Cooper Gallery in New York City (wall drawing #11) and consisted of four squares, each with lines meticulously drawn in the four directions: left to right, up and down, diagonal in each direction.  He was exploring a system of rules and the various permutations of the system.  He developed written instructions for these wall drawings for his studio assistants to execute.  Neveretheless, the vocabulary to create these works had to evolve, as the drawings became increasingly complex in color choices and application. LeWitt kept these instructions very standard, developing easy-to-understand codes for color combinations, lines, and other elements.  Throughout his entire career, he continued to explore his basic concept, to use writing (both captions and instructions) to make that concept accessible to the viewers, and valuing the instructions and idea over the art object itself. 

The artist and his assistants had to become more specialized in specific drafting and painting techniques to create the desired effect (e.g. , masking with blue painter’s tape to achieve clear separation between bands of color, using a contractor’s blue chalk snap line tool to execute lines, and sanding and preparing walls with chemicals to make them more receptive to the paint).  The designs continued to grow in detail as exemplified by some of his final works “Scribbles”, where he returned to the graceful graphite pencil drawings using scribble lines in different spacing to create beautiful geometric forms with shading (wall drawing #1247 August 2007, #1260 July 2008, #1261 July 2008).  A complete Sol LeWitt wall drawingretrospective has been installed at the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art (Mass MoCA), and will be on display for 25 years, until 2033.