Works on Paper

In January 1978, when I was 28 years old, I arrived in New York City from San Diego for a five-month stay. Without a studio in which to make art, I decided to write about it. Though I had no training as a critic, I had made and thought about sculpture for a decade. Robert Smithson wrote to make way for his sculpture in the late ’60s, I knew, as had Donald Judd before him.

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Not Lost, Not Found: Bill Bollinger

| | Art in America, March 2000, Vol. 88, N° 3, pp. 104-117, 143-144 by Wade Saunders — In the late 1960s, sculptor Bill Bollinger showed with—and was routinely compared to—such other emerging artists as Richard Serra, Keith Sonnier and Bruce Nauman, all of whom admired his work. Today, 12 ...
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Making Art, Making Artists

| | Art in America, January 1993, Vol. 81, N° 1, pp. 70-95 by Wade Saunders — In a new variant on the apprenticeship system, many artists now employ paid assistants for tasks ranging from menial labor to creative collaboration in the production of their art works. Below, comments by ...
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Talking Objects: Interviews with Ten Younger Sculptors

| | Art in America, November 1985, Vol. 73, N° 11 pp. 110–137 by Wade Saunders — Over the last five years, while painting has occupied the art-world limelight, a new generation of American sculptors has been quietly reinventing the syntax of their medium. Below, one sculptor's critical assessment—and ten ...
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In Dreams Begin Responsibilities, Bas Jan Ader

| | Art in America, February 2004, Vol. 92, N° 2, pp. 54-65 by Wade Saunders — When Dutch artist Bas Jan Ader was lost at sea in 1975, he left behind a slim body of mostly photo-based work. Now posthumous editions of some of these pieces are raising provocative ...
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Touch and Eye: ‘50s Sculpture

| | Art in America, December 1982, Vol. 70, N° 10, pp. 90–104, 121 by Wade Saunders — Often linked to Abstract Expressionism, the ten sculptors discussed below were relatively inconspicuous during the ’60s and ’70s. Among the traits they share are their references to both myth and nature, their ...
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At Critical Mass, Richard Serra

| | Art in America, October 1986, Vol. 74, N° 10, pp. 152-155 by Wade Saunders — Richard Serra’s recent retrospective, along with two ancillary exhibitions, showed him ever more adeptly addressing issues of light, space and energy. Since the exhibition of the thrown-lead casting Splashing and of the leaning ...
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Risk & Balance: Mark di Suvero

| | Art in America, December 1983, Vol. 71, N° 11, pp. 128-135 by Wade Saunders — Sensitive to sculptural as opposed to architectural scale, di Suvero’s best new steel pieces combine visual sweep and detail, massive size and viewer participation. This spring a sizable group of Mark di Suvero’s ...
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Hot Metal

| | Art in America, June 1980, Vol. 68, n° 6, pp. 86–95 by Wade Saunders — More and more sculptors have turned to casting in metal—particularly in bronze—motivated by a desire for permanence, a renewed interest in “touch,” even by economics. Here, an overview of present-day casting as practiced ...
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Art Inc.: The Whitney’s 1979 Biennial

| | Art in America, March/April 1979, Vol. 67, n° 8, pp. 96-99 by Wade Saunders — This year's survey of the current scene, low on risks and surprises, was largely a confirmation of what is known. It differed from its predecessors by being organized into stylistic categories and by ...
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Liquid Forms

| | A commissioned catalogue essay for the exhibition “Bronze, Plaster, and Polyester” which was curated by Elsa Weiner Longhauser for the Goldie Paley Gallery at Moore College of Art, Philadelphia. The show was open November 6—December 12, 1987. by Wade Saunders — The exhibition “Bronze, Plaster, and Polyester” proposes ...
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Los Angeles

| | Bomb, Winter 1988, N° XXII by Wade Saunders — The Los Angeles art world is growing and changing more rapidly than at any time in its history. Even dealer attitudes are different than they were before. Top LA galleries, which for years avoided exhibiting local artists, now scramble ...
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