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Minimal
Art - the name of the historical movement is linked with a small number
of artists who worked on a new definition of works
of art as they relate both to the space and to viewers. Minimal
Art's objectively describable structures and proportions, its elemental
forms and serial accumulations, its industrial materials and production
forms argue consistently against abstract art's
'all-over' and the subjective painting gestures of the 50s. Minimalism
and after - the title of our exhibition including new acquisitions for
the Daimler Art Collection - suggests two things. The show focuses on young international artists whose work is essentially to be understood from the point of view of the history of Minimal Art and its effects. Given the nature of the Daimler Art Collection, we have concentrated on pictures that consider the central criteria of Minimalism from today's perspective: the essentially sculptural presence of the picture-object, coolly geometrical structures, intuitively intelligible order and proportions, works presented so that they relate to the space and the viewer, rejecting anything of a symbolic or narrative nature. Despite all this, the works are grounded in individual arguments, though these may be political, formal, art-reflective or purely aesthetic.
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