Lawrence Weiner (b. 1942) is one of the primary figures associated with the emergence of conceptual art in the 1960s. For over four decades, Weiner has defined art as a representation of relationships in the physical world, 'the relationship of human beings to objects and objects to objects in relat[...]
Lawrence Weiner's art can appear painted across an entire building, floating inside a souvenir pen or sung as a lyric by a country and western band. One of the canonical Conceptual artists of the 1960s, Weiner was among the first to 'dematerialize' the object of art into the realm of language and id[...]
In 1972, Lawrence Weiner (born 1942) published his ninth artist's book: Green as Well as Blue as Well as Red. "The book came about because of an exhibition of the work at Jack Wendler's gallery in London," writes Weiner. "I asked Jack if he would make a book & he said yes. He found a printer and the[...]
This book documents a recent collaborative exhibition of Per Kirkeby (born 1938) and Lawrence Weiner (born 1942). Kirkeby presented two new brick stone sculptures built in situ at the gallery space, while Weiner exhibited new and recent text pieces mounted on the gallery walls as well as on the insi[...]