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Installation view of "Form into Spirit: Ellsworth Kelly’s ‘Austin’," Blanton Museum of Art, The…
Form into Spirit: Ellsworth Kelly's 'Austin'
Installation view of "Form into Spirit: Ellsworth Kelly’s ‘Austin’," Blanton Museum of Art, The…
Installation view of "Form into Spirit: Ellsworth Kelly’s ‘Austin’," Blanton Museum of Art, The University of Texas at Austin, February 18, 2018–April 29, 2018.

Form into Spirit: Ellsworth Kelly's 'Austin'

Sunday, February 18, 2018 - Sunday, April 29, 2018
Austin, the monumental last work by renowned American artist Ellsworth Kelly (1923—2015), is a freestanding stone building with luminous colored glass windows that is now part of the Blanton’s permanent collection. The structure has its roots in the artist’s deep appreciation of historical European art and architecture, and this exhibition explores how Austin’s conceptual origins began in the seminal period Kelly spent in France (1948—54), when he immersed himself in the country’s artistic traditions and monuments. Rarely seen early paintings and drawings fuse Judeo-Christian themes with the artist’s own modern aesthetic, making clear Austin’s decades-long germination. This section will also include the first models and designs for the building’s initial conception in the mid-1980s. Four other expansive sections will elucidate Kelly’s rich explorations of Austin’s four main motifs: Spectrum, Black and White, Color Grid, and Totem. These formal concepts were deeply meaningful to him throughout his career, and he created them in drawing, painting, printmaking, and sculpture.