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A Minimalist Mawrter

Anne Truitt 鈥43 drew maximum meaning from minimal form.

鈥淎t Bryn Mawr, I learned, almost more than I can say,鈥 said Anne Truitt 鈥43.

A psychology major and, for a brief time a nurse, Truitt was one of the major American sculptors of the late 20th century. Although labeled a Minimalist, Truitt was really sui generis. Eschewing that movement鈥檚 industrial materials and techniques, she painstakingly painted and sanded multiple coats of color in subtle variations onto wooden constructions fabricated to her specifications.

As its industrial aesthetic suggests, Minimalism explicitly rejected Abstract Expressionism and its focus on subjectivity and self-expression. Here, too, Truitt parted company with her male counterparts like Donald Judd and Carl Andre.

鈥淲hat is important to me,鈥 she said, 鈥渋s not geometrical shape per se, or color per se, but to make a relationship between shape and color which feels to me like my experience. To make what feels to me like reality.鈥 Truitt offered a bridge between the excesses of both schools, tempering both the radical subjectivity of the Abstract Expressionists and the radical objectivity of the Minimalists. As she said, 鈥淚鈥檝e struggled all my life to get maximum meaning out of the simplest possible form.鈥

Published on: 07/10/2021