Dictionary Definition
minimalism n : an art movement in sculpture and
painting that began in the 1950s and emphasized extreme
simplification of form and color [syn: minimal art,
reductivism]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- A style of art that emphasises extreme simplicity of form.
- A style of music that emphasises extreme simplicity of rhythms and melodic forms to achieve a trancelike effect.
Translations
- Croatian: minimalizam
- German: Minimalismus
Related terms
Extensive Definition
Minimalism describes movements in various forms
of art and design, especially visual art and
music, where the work is
stripped down to its most fundamental features. As a specific
movement in the arts it is identified with developments in
post-World War II Western Art, most strongly with American visual
arts in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Prominent artists
associated with this movement include Donald Judd,
Carl
Andre and Richard
Serra. It is rooted in the reductive aspects of Modernism, and is
often interpreted as a reaction against Abstract
Expressionism and a bridge to Postmodern
art practices.
The term has expanded to encompass a movement in
music which features repetition and iteration, as in the
compositions of Steve Reich,
Philip
Glass, John
Adams, and Terry Riley.
(See also Postminimalism).
The term "minimalist" is often applied
colloquially to designate anything which is spare or stripped to
its essentials. It has also been used to describe the plays of
Samuel
Beckett, the films of
Robert
Bresson, the stories of Raymond
Carver, and even the automobile designs of Colin
Chapman.
Musical minimalism
In art music of the last 35 years, the term minimalism is sometimes applied to music which displays some or all of the following features: repetition (often of short musical phrases, with minimal variations over long periods of time, ostinati) or stasis (often in the form of drones and long tones); emphasis on consonant harmony; a steady pulse; hypnotic effect; sometimes use of phase shifting where sound waves gradually move out of sync with each other. Minimalist music can sometimes sound similar to different forms of electronic music (e.g. Basic Channel), as well as the texture-based compositions of composers such as Gyorgy Ligeti; it is often the case that the end result is similar, but the approach is not.The term minimalism, endowed independently by
composer-critics Michael
Nyman and Tom
Johnson, has been controversial, but was in wide use by the
mid-1970s. The application of a visual art term to music has been
protested; however, not only do minimalist sculpture and music
share a certain spare simplicity of means and an aversion to
ornamental detail, but many of the early minimalist concerts
happened in connection with exhibits of minimalist art by Sol LeWitt and
others. Several composers associated with minimalism have disavowed
the term, notably Philip
Glass, who has reportedly said, "That word should be stamped
out!!"
A recent form of minimalistic music, Minimal
techno, a sub-genre of Techno music, is characterized by a
stripped-down, glitchy sound, simple 4/4 beats (usually around
120-135 BPM), repetition of short loops, and subtle changes.
Minimalist design
The term minimalism is also used to describe a trend in design and architecture where in the subject is reduced to its necessary elements. Minimalist design has been highly influenced by Japanese traditional design and architecture. In addition, the work of De Stijl artists is a major source of reference for this kind of work. De Stijl expanded the ideas that could be expressed by using basic elements such as lines and planes organized in very particular manners.Architect
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe adopted the motto "Less
is more" to describe his aesthetic tactic of arranging the
numerous necessary components of a building to create an impression
of extreme simplicity, by enlisting every element and detail to
serve multiple visual and functional purposes (such as designing a
floor to also serve as the radiator, or a massive fireplace to also
house the bathroom). Designer Buckminster
Fuller adopted the engineer's goal of "Doing more with less",
but his concerns were oriented towards technology and engineering
rather than aesthetics. A similar sentiment was industrial designer
Dieter
Rams' motto, "Less but better", adapted from van der Rohe. The
structure uses relatively simple elegant designs. The structure's
beauty is also determined by playing with lighting, using the basic
geometric shapes as outlines, using tasteful non-fussy bright color
combinations, usually natural textures and colors, and clean and
fine finishes. May use color brightness balance and contrast
between surface colors to improve visual aesthetics. The structure
would usually have industrial and space age style utilities (lamps,
stoves, stairs, etcetera), neat and straight components (like walls
or stairs) that appear to be machined with machines, flat or nearly
flat roofs, pleasing negative spaces, and large windows. This and
science fiction may have contributed to the late twentieth century
futuristic architecture design, and modern home decor. Modern
minimalist home architecture with its unnecessary internal walls
removed may have led to the popularity of the open plan kitchen and
living room style.
Another modern master who exemplifies reductivist
ideas is Luis
Barragan. In minimalism, the architectural designers pay
special attention to the connection between perfect planes, elegant
lighting, and careful consideration of the void spaces left by the
removal of three-dimensional shapes from an architectural design.
The more attractive looking minimalist home designs are not truly
minimalist, because these use more expensive building materials and
finishes, and are relatively larger.
Contemporary architects working in this tradition
include John Pawson,
Eduardo
Souto de Moura, Alvaro Siza,
Tadao
Ando, Alberto
Campo Baeza,Yoshio
Taniguchi, Peter
Zumthor, Vincent
Van Duysen, Claudio Silvestrin, Michael Gabellini, and Richard
Gluckman.
Minimalism in visual art
expert-subject Film Minimalism in visual art, sometimes referred to as "literalist art" and "ABC Art" emerged in New York in the 1960s. It is regarded as a reaction against the painterly forms of Abstract Expressionism as well as the discourse, institutions and ideologies that supported it. As artist and critic Thomas Lawson noted in his 1977 catalog essay Last Exit: Painting, minimalism did not reject Clement Greenberg's claims about Modernist Painting's reduction to surface and materials so much as take his claims literally. Minimalism was the result, even though the term "minimalism" was not generally embraced by the artists associated with it, and many practitioners of art designated minimalist by critics did not identify it as a movement as such.In contrast to the Abstract Expressionists,
Minimalists were influenced by composer John Cage, poet
William
Carlos Williams, and architect Frederick
Law Olmsted. They very explicitly stated that their art was not
self-expression, in opposition to the previous decade's Abstract
Expressionists. In general, Minimalism's features included:
geometric, often cubic forms purged of all metaphor, equality of
parts, repetition, neutral surfaces, and industrial
materials.
Robert Morris, an influential theorist and
artist, wrote a three part essay, "Notes on Sculpture 1-3,"
originally published across three issues of Artforum in 1966. In
these essays, Morris attempted to define a conceptual framework and
formal elements for himself and one that would embrace the
practices of his contemporaries. These essays paid great attention
to the idea of the gestalt- "parts... bound together in such a way
that they create a maximum resistance to perceptual separation."
Morris later described an art represented by a "marked lateral
spread and no regularized units or symmetrical intervals..." in
"Notes on Sculpture 4: Beyond Objects," originally published in
Artforum, 1969, continuing to say that "indeterminacy of
arrangement of parts is a literal aspect of the physical existence
of the thing.” The general shift in theory of which this essay is
an expression suggests the transitions into what would later be
referred to as Post-Minimalism.
One of the first artists specifically associated
with Minimalism was the painter, Frank
Stella, whose early "stripe" paintings were highlighted in the
1959 show, "16 Americans", organized by Dorothy Miller at the
Museum of Modern Art in New York. The width of the stripes in Frank
Stellas's stripe paintings were determined by the dimensions of the
lumber, visible as the depth of the painting when viewed from the
side, used to construct the supportive chassis upon which the
canvas was stretched. The decisions about structures on the front
surface of the canvas were therefore not entirely subjective, but
pre-conditioned by a "given" feature of the physical construction
of the support. In the show catalog, Carl Andre noted, "Art
excludes the unnecessary. Frank Stella has found it necessary to
paint stripes. There is nothing else in his painting." These
reductive works were in sharp contrast to the energy-filled and
apparently highly subjective and emotionally-charged paintings of
Willem De
Kooning or Franz Kline
and, in terms of precedent among the previous generation of
abstract expressionists, leaned more toward less gestural, often
somber coloristic field paintings of Barnett
Newman and Mark Rothko.
Although Stella received immediate attention from the MOMA show,
artists like Ralph Humphrey and Robert Ryman
had begun to explore monochromatic formats by the late 50's.
Because of a tendency in Minimalism to exclude
the pictorial, illusionistic and fictive in favor of the literal,
there was a movement away from painterly and toward sculptural
concerns. Donald Judd had started as a painter, and ended as a
creator of objects. His seminal essay, "Specific Objects"
(published in Arts Yearbook 8, 1965), was a touchstone of theory
for the formation of Minimalist aesthetics. In this essay, Judd
found a starting point for a new territory for American art, and a
simultaneous rejection of residual inherited European artistic
values. He pointed to evidence of this development in the works of
an array of artists active in New York at the time, including
Jasper Johns, Dan Flavin and Lee Bontecou. Of "preliminary"
importance for Judd was the work of George Ortmanhttp://brooklynrail.org/2006/12/artseen/ortman,
who had concretized and distilled painting's forms into blunt,
tough, philosophically charged geometries. These Specific Objects
inhabited a space not then comfortably classifiable as either
painting or sculpture. That the categorical identity of such
objects was itself in question, and that they avoided easy
association with well-worn and over-familiar conventions, was a
part of their value for Judd.
In a much more broad and general sense, one
might, in fact, find European roots of Minimalism in the geometric
abstractions painters in the Bauhaus, in the
works of Piet Mondrian and other artists associated with the
movement DeStijl, in Russian
Constructivists and in the work of the Romanian sculptor
Constantin
Brâncuşi.
This movement was heavily criticised by high
modernist formalist art critics and historians. Some anxious
critics thought Minimalist art represented a misunderstanding of
the modern dialectic of painting and sculpture as defined by critic
Clement Greenberg, arguably the dominant American critic of
painting in the period leading up to the 1960s. The most notable
critique of Minimalism was produced by
Michael Fried, a Greenbergian critic, who objected to the work
on the basis of its "theatricality". In Art and Objecthood
(published in Artforum in June 1967) he declared that the
Minimalist work of art, particularly Minimalist sculpture, was
based on an engagement with the physicality of the spectator. He
argued that work like Robert Morris's transformed the act of
viewing into a type of spectacle, in which the artifice of the act
observation and the viewer's participation in the work were
unveiled. Fried saw this displacement of the viewer's experience
from an aesthetic engagement within, to an event outside of the
artwork as a failure of Minimal art. Fried's opinionated essay was
immediately challenged by artist Robert Smithson in a letter to the
editor in the October issue of Artforum. Smithson stated the
following: "What Fried fears most is the consciousness of what he
is doing--namely being himself theatrical."
Other Minimalist artists include:
Richard Allen, Walter
Darby Bannard, Larry
Bell, Ronald Bladen, Mel Bochner,
Norman
Carlberg, Erwin Hauer,
Sol
LeWitt, Brice
Marden, Agnes
Martin, Jo Baer, John
McCracken, Paul Mogensen, David Novros, Ad
Reinhardt, Richard
Serra, Tony
Smith, Robert
Smithson, and Anne
Truitt.
Ad Reinhardt, actually an artist of the Abstract
Expressionist generation, but one whose reductive all-black
paintings seemed to anticipate minimalism, had this to say about
the value of a reductive approach to art: 'The more stuff in it,
the busier the work of art, the worse it is. More is less. Less is
more. The eye is a menace to clear sight. The laying bare of
oneself is obscene. Art begins with the getting rid of
nature.'
Also notable are the Postminimalist
artists, including Eva Hesse,
Martin
Puryear, Joel Shapiro
and Hannah
Wilke.
Literary minimalism
Literary minimalism is characterized by an
economy with words and a focus on surface description. Minimalist
authors eschew adverbs and prefer allowing context to dictate
meaning. Readers are expected to take an active role in the
creation of a story, to "choose sides" based on oblique hints and
innuendo, rather than reacting to directions from the author. The
characters in minimalist stories and novels tend to be
unexceptional; they may be pool supply salespeople or second tier
athletic coaches rather than famous detectives or the fabulously
wealthy. Generally, the short stories are "slice
of life" stories.
Some 1940s-era crime fiction of writers such as
James
M. Cain and Jim
Thompson adopted a stripped-down, matter-of-fact prose style to
considerable effect; some classifiy this prose style as
minimalism.
Another strand of literary minimalism arose in
response to the meta-fiction
trend of the 1960s and early 1970s (John Barth,
Robert
Coover, and William H.
Gass). These writers were also spare with prose and kept a
psychological distance from their subject matter.
Minimalist authors, or those who are identified
with minimalism during certain periods of their writing careers,
include the following: Raymond
Carver, Chuck
Palahniuk, Bret
Easton Ellis, Ernest
Hemingway, K.J.
Stevens, Amy Hempel,
Bobbie Ann
Mason, Tobias
Wolff, Grace Paley,
Sandra
Cisneros, Mary
Robison, Frederick
Barthelme, Richard Ford
and Alicia
Erian.
American poets such as William
Carlos Williams, early Ezra Pound,
Robert
Creeley, Robert
Grenier, and Aram Saroyan
are sometimes identified with their minimalist style.
The Irish author Samuel
Beckett is also known for his minimalist plays and prose.
Notes
See also
minimalism in Min Nan: Chì-chió-chú-gī
minimalism in Bosnian: Minimalizam
minimalism in Catalan: Art Minimalista
minimalism in Czech: Minimalismus
minimalism in Danish: Minimalisme
minimalism in German: Minimalismus (Kunst)
minimalism in Estonian: Minimalism
minimalism in Spanish: Minimalismo
minimalism in Esperanto: Minimumismo
minimalism in Persian: مینیمالیسم
minimalism in French: Minimalisme
minimalism in Galician: Minimalismo
minimalism in Korean: 미니멀리즘
minimalism in Italian: Minimalismo
minimalism in Hebrew: מינימליזם
minimalism in Georgian: მინიმალიზმი
minimalism in Lithuanian: Minimalizmas
minimalism in Hungarian: Minimal art
minimalism in Malay (macrolanguage):
Minimalisme
minimalism in Dutch: Minimal Art
minimalism in Japanese: ミニマル
minimalism in Norwegian: Minimalisme
minimalism in Norwegian Nynorsk:
Minimalisme
minimalism in Polish: Minimalizm (sztuka)
minimalism in Portuguese: Minimalismo
minimalism in Romanian: Minimalism
minimalism in Russian: Минимализм
minimalism in Simple English: Minimalism
minimalism in Slovak: Minimal art
minimalism in Serbian: Минимализам
minimalism in Finnish: Minimalismi
minimalism in Swedish: Minimalism
minimalism in Thai: ลัทธิจุลนิยม
minimalism in Vietnamese: Phong cách tối
giản
minimalism in Turkish: Minimalizm
minimalism in Ukrainian: Мінімалізм
minimalism in Chinese: 極簡主義