Bruce Nauman

Bruce Nauman is an artist completely uninterested in adding to a collection of things that are art.  He is investigating the possibilities of what art may be.  He was interested in the role of the artist in society.  As early as 1964 he tried to give up painting – “My concept of being an artist was making pictures, landscapes but I knew that this was not enough”.  At first it seems as though he was very unsure how to break away from painting which is like Manzoni’s earlier work.  He started to adapt painting to suit some of his ideas and his next step was to weld steel parts into organic shapes and bolt them onto his canvases.  “I loved moving the paint around and the manipulation of materials.  It was very serious, but it also got in the way.  I still dont trust any kind of lush solution, which painting was, and so I decided that I was not going to be a painter.  I can imagine that this would be a difficult decision to make as an artist.  Nauman often made list of things that he could do for example to a straight bar such as bend it, twist it etc.  He applied the same method to his performances in relation to the shape of his body.  This was to emphasise the process of making art rather than the result.  “In a way I was using my body as a piece of material and manipulating it”

One of his most famous pieces of work is his self portrait as a fountain.  I find his work in neon signs really different and fun.  He experimented so thoroughly for everything he does.  The writing involved in the neon signs is really ineresting as he spells the words backwords creating new meanings and highlighting certain letters within the words.

 

Above – Double face

I really like the way Nauman works and thinks about things.  I feel that he has a sense of style even though he says he likes the way certain artists dont seem to have a style and his work is pretty varied he approaches the waork in a similar way.  I especially like his work in neon as the way he used it to describe sex and sort of swear words and stuff I think worked really well illuminating it rather than trying to hide it.


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