SUPPORT THE WORK

GetWiki

Douglas Huebler

ARTICLE SUBJECTS
aesthetics  →
being  →
complexity  →
database  →
enterprise  →
ethics  →
fiction  →
history  →
internet  →
knowledge  →
language  →
licensing  →
linux  →
logic  →
method  →
news  →
perception  →
philosophy  →
policy  →
purpose  →
religion  →
science  →
sociology  →
software  →
truth  →
unix  →
wiki  →
ARTICLE TYPES
essay  →
feed  →
help  →
system  →
wiki  →
ARTICLE ORIGINS
critical  →
discussion  →
forked  →
imported  →
original  →
Douglas Huebler
[ temporary import ]
please note:
- the content below is remote from Wikipedia
- it has been imported raw for GetWiki
{{short description|American artist (1924 - 1997)}}{{more citations needed|date=November 2012}}







factoids
| birth_place = Ann Arbor, Michigan19971210}}| death_place = Truro, MassachusettsAmericans>American| known_for = Conceptual art| training = University of Michigan| movement =| notable_works =| patrons =| awards = }}Douglas Huebler (October 27, 1924 – July 12, 1997) was an American conceptual artist.

Life and career

Douglas Huebler grew up in rural Michigan during the Depression and served in the Marines in World War II. After the war, funded by the GI Bill, Huebler earned his bachelor's and master's degrees at the University of Michigan, and later went on to study at the Académie Julian in Paris. He worked for several years as a commercial art illustrator in New York as he established himself as an artist. (His family still has a few of the illustrations from this period.)Initially a painter, Huebler moved on to produce geometric Formica sculptures in the early '60s, which aligned him with the Minimalist movement. In 1969, he participated, with Joseph Kosuth, Robert Barry and Lawrence Weiner, in a landmark exhibition of conceptual art curated by Seth Siegelaub. As part of the show, Huebler issued one of his most famous statements: "The world is full of objects, more or less interesting; I do not wish to add any more." In the late 1960s Huebler's work was published in 0 to 9 magazine, an avant-garde journal which experimented with language and meaning-making.Huebler subsequently started producing works in numerous media often involving documentary photography, maps and text to explore social environments and the effect of passing time on objects. A representative example of Huebler's early work is Duration Piece #5, 1969, a series of ten black & white photographs with accompanying text; to document the piece, Huebler stood in Central Park and, each time he heard a bird call, he pointed his camera in the direction of the call and shot a photograph. In 1971, he began "Variable Piece #70 (In Process) Global," for which he proposed his intention "to photographically document the existence of everyone alive." In the 1980s and '90s, Huebler began incorporating painting into his conceptual art pieces, creating a persona he called "the Great Corrector," who took works by masters like Picasso, Matisse, Bruegel and Hieronymus Bosch and attempted to "make them better." For his "Buried Treasure" series, incorporating text about the unscrupulous dealer, Huebler paints fake Monets, Van Goghs, Gauguins and a De Chirico.Suzanne Muchnic (June 1, 1988), Huebler Adds Words to His Varied Palette Los Angeles Times.Huebler's academic career spanned more than forty years; he taught art at Bradford College in Massachusetts, and at Harvard. Huebler served as dean of the art school at California Institute of Arts from 1976 to 1988 where he influenced a generation of artists including Mike KelleyNEWS, Finkel, Jori, Mike Kelley dies at 57; L.A. contemporary artist,weblink Los Angeles Times, February 2, 2012, and Christopher Williams.JOURNAL, Boucher, Brian, Christopher Williams Exhibition Will Hit Art Institute, MoMA,weblinkweblink" title="archive.today/20130117053031weblink">weblink dead, January 17, 2013, Art in America, July 3, 2012, In 1989, he retired to Cape Cod. He died in Truro, Massachusetts in 1997.NEWS, Smith, Roberta, Douglas Huebler, 72, Conceptual Artist,weblink The New York Times, July 17, 1997, NEWS, Reich, Kenneth, Douglas Huebler; Helped Start Conceptualism,weblink Los Angeles Times, July 15, 1997,

Exhibitions

Huebler's first one-person museum exhibition was at the Phillips Gallery, Detroit, in 1953. Thereafter, he exhibited extensively in galleries and museums in the United States and Europe, as well as in international exhibitions such as documenta V (1972), and was included in many surveys of conceptual art. The last retrospective of his work during his lifetime was presented at the Palais des Beaux-Arts in Brussels in 1994. There have been several posthumous one-person exhibitions, including at the Camden Arts Centre,WEB,weblink Douglas Huebler, London (2002) and the MAMCO, Geneva (2006). In 2004, Huebler's work was included in the exhibition, A Minimal Future? Art as Object 1958–1968, at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles.Douglas Huebler: Crocodile Tears, March 3 - April 28, 2012 Paula Cooper Gallery, New York.

References

{{reflist|2}}

External links

{{Authority control}}

- content above as imported from Wikipedia
- "Douglas Huebler" does not exist on GetWiki (yet)
- time: 5:53pm EDT - Wed, May 01 2024
[ this remote article is provided by Wikipedia ]
LATEST EDITS [ see all ]
GETWIKI 23 MAY 2022
GETWIKI 09 JUL 2019
Eastern Philosophy
History of Philosophy
GETWIKI 09 MAY 2016
GETWIKI 18 OCT 2015
M.R.M. Parrott
Biographies
GETWIKI 20 AUG 2014
CONNECT