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Double Curve
Ellsworth Kelly
1988
bronze


Since the early 1950s, Ellsworth Kelly has worked with pure geometric forms in sculpture, painting, and prints. Double Curve consists of two 18-foot-high gently curving bronze arcs. The artist made the arcs deliberately two-dimensional--when you look at them from the side they almost disappear. The sculpture itself seems like one of his paintings translated to three-dimensional form. The curves of the forms are rigorously controlled, setting up a subtle tension between the two arcs, which nearly touch in the center. Kelly works not only with geometric shapes, but with the space surrounding the forms. For instance, Double Curve relies on the space existing between the arcs for the sculpture to achieve a sense of tension or rhythm. This piece provides an excellent example of the artist's spare, geometric style.



Text Citation
Text for Ellsworth Kelly, Double Curve (1988), from the curriculum guide The Minneapolis Sculpture Garden: A Garden for All Seasons, Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, 1998.
Object Details
Dimensions:  each 216 x 40 x 4.5 inches
Inscriptions:  punched into lower right "EK 787"
Classification:  Sculptures; Sculpture
Owner:  Walker Art Center
Accession Number:  1988.380.1-.2
Credit Line:  Gift of Judy and Kenneth Dayton, 1988