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An art installation in a room corner featuring a glass shelf illuminated by a spotlight, creating reflections and a small rainbow spectrum on the wall.

An art installation in a room corner featuring a glass shelf illuminated by a spotlight, creating reflections and a small rainbow spectrum on the wall.

Corner Lamp DBS by Larry Bell, 1981 (half-plate glass coated with aluminum and silicon monoxide, and light projector, corner)
#larrybell #art #contemporaryart #lightart

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Larry Bell sculpture installation in Madison Square Park called Improvisations In The Park - from October 2025. street art - sculpture. Larry Bell installation theme.

Larry Bell sculpture installation in Madison Square Park called Improvisations In The Park - from October 2025. street art - sculpture. Larry Bell installation theme.

scopOphilic_micromessaging_1512 - scopOphilic1997 presents a new MicroMessaging series. (2025)

#scopOphilic #micromessaging #streetart #graffiti #Manhattan #nyc #photography #ArtistsOnBlueSky #MadisonSquarePark #LarryBell #ImprovisationsInThePark

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Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (Remastered 2009)
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (Remastered 2009) YouTube video by The Beatles - Topic

#BirthdateUnknown, 1939: #BOTD: #HBD #LarryBell! #Artists #InstallationArtists #Sculptors #Minimalism #GeometricAbstraction #ItWasAFakeMoustache #PeopleOnTheCoverOfSgtPepper #MusicSky #BeatlesSky
www.youtube.com/watch?v=VtXl...

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"Untitled 1991" by Larry Bell

"Untitled 1991" by Larry Bell

3/3...The #VaporPainting #Untitled1991 by #LarryBell is on loan at #TheSmithCenter thx to the #MarjorieBarrickMuseumofArt @unlv.edu. Bell is still working & splits his time between LA & Taos, New Mexico, plus has multiple exhibitions currently on display in #NYC, TX & NM.⁠⁠
#ArtSky #ArtOfTheDay

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"Untitled 1991" by Larry Bell

"Untitled 1991" by Larry Bell

2/3...By combining different surface qualities as layers—such as Mylar and laminating film—followed by Bell’s finely tuned vacuum-coating technique, #LarryBell is able to create a vibrant spectrum of colors that possess numerous effects.⁠..

#ContemporaryArt #ArtSky #FineArt #LasVegasArtMuseum #DTLV

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Video

#ArtSpotlight: “Untitled 1991” by Larry Bell⁠

American artist #LarryBell (b. 1939) has always been fascinated by the properties of light on surfaces. Although he began his career in 1959, it wasn’t until 1978 that Bell started his #VaporDrawings series...1/3
#ArtCollection #ArtSky #LasVegas #Vegas

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Preview
‘Larry Bell: Improvisations in the Park’ & ‘Irresponsible Iridescence’ Unveils in Madison Square Park & The Judd Foundation - GothamToGo On September 30th, luminary artist Larry Bell will take over Madison Square Park with his largest public art project to date in his expansive, seven-decade career. Commissioned by Madison Square Park ...

On View #LarryBell #madisonsquarepark #juddfoundation

gothamtogo.com/larry-bell-i...

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Preview
‘Larry Bell: Improvisations in the Park’ to Unveil in Madison Square Park - GothamToGo On September 30th, luminary artist Larry Bell will take over Madison Square Park with his largest public art project to date in his expansive, seven-decade career. Commissioned by Madison Square Park ...

Saving the date #larrybell #madisonsquarepark

‘Larry Bell: Improvisations in the Park’ to Unveil in Madison Square Park gothamtogo.com/larry-bell-i...

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Glowing screens, redacted texts, mirrored forms—light as force and subject takes centre stage at @hauserwirth.bsky.social St. Moritz this summer. Featuring works by #PipilottiRist, #JennyHolzer, #FrankBowling, #MartinCreed and #LarryBell, 'Light' is on view until 30 August.

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b. 1939, Chicago
Larry Bell was born in Chicago in 1939 and grew up Southern California. Bell attended the Chouinard Art Institute in Los Angeles from 1957 to 1959, where he created abstract oil paintings dominated by gestural brushstrokes influenced by Abstract Expressionism. At Chouinard he met Robert Irwin, an influential arbiter of Perceptualism, who profoundly affected how Bell conceptualized vision. From 1960 to 1962, Bell created a series of shaped canvases with the corners lopped off, onto which he painted simple polygonal forms that mimed the form of the canvas. By 1962 Bell had integrated both mirrored and transparent glass into his painting in several collage constructions; the different types of reflective glass created spatial complexity, conflating the world of the viewer with that of the object. Bell soon transitioned to sculpture with shallow boxes of glass onto which he painted geometric shapes. In 1963, Bell developed his signature glass cubes, the earliest versions of which were covered with opaque designs of stripes, checkers and, most commonly, ellipses. Several of the ellipse-covered cubes were included in Bell's solo exhibition at the Pace Gallery in New York in 1965, which sold out on its first day. Bell moved to New York soon after this successful exhibition, but stayed for only a year before returning to Southern California. The artist abandoned the geometric surface designs and created his famous elegant vacuum coated glass cubes with chrome frames from 1964 to 1968. In these new works, often included in major exhibitions on Minimalism, Bell explored the properties of glass by offering subtle gradations of transparency, reflectivity, and color. These faint variations, achieved by specialized machinery Bell obtained for his studio, supply seemingly simple forms with complex inquiries into the nature of perception.

b. 1939, Chicago Larry Bell was born in Chicago in 1939 and grew up Southern California. Bell attended the Chouinard Art Institute in Los Angeles from 1957 to 1959, where he created abstract oil paintings dominated by gestural brushstrokes influenced by Abstract Expressionism. At Chouinard he met Robert Irwin, an influential arbiter of Perceptualism, who profoundly affected how Bell conceptualized vision. From 1960 to 1962, Bell created a series of shaped canvases with the corners lopped off, onto which he painted simple polygonal forms that mimed the form of the canvas. By 1962 Bell had integrated both mirrored and transparent glass into his painting in several collage constructions; the different types of reflective glass created spatial complexity, conflating the world of the viewer with that of the object. Bell soon transitioned to sculpture with shallow boxes of glass onto which he painted geometric shapes. In 1963, Bell developed his signature glass cubes, the earliest versions of which were covered with opaque designs of stripes, checkers and, most commonly, ellipses. Several of the ellipse-covered cubes were included in Bell's solo exhibition at the Pace Gallery in New York in 1965, which sold out on its first day. Bell moved to New York soon after this successful exhibition, but stayed for only a year before returning to Southern California. The artist abandoned the geometric surface designs and created his famous elegant vacuum coated glass cubes with chrome frames from 1964 to 1968. In these new works, often included in major exhibitions on Minimalism, Bell explored the properties of glass by offering subtle gradations of transparency, reflectivity, and color. These faint variations, achieved by specialized machinery Bell obtained for his studio, supply seemingly simple forms with complex inquiries into the nature of perception.

 In 1968 Bell began to abandon the chrome frame and create larger cubes in which the effects of the planes of glass interact only with one another. This development led to Bell's glass panels, which stood eight feet tall, operated at an almost architectural scale, and could be arranged in countless configurations in the gallery space. In 1973 Bell moved to Taos, New Mexico, where he established a studio and created the huge fifty-six-panel adjustable glass structure The Iceberg and It's Shadow (1974). In the late 1970s Bell initiated his Vapor Drawings and Mirage Paintings, which extended the artist's investigations into perception, but this time on a flat plane. Since the late 1970s, Bell has engaged with such diverse practices as furniture design and bronze sculptures, as well as large-scale glass sculptures and installations like Moving Ways (1981–82), The Wind Wedge (1982), and Made for Arlosen (1992).
Solo exhibitions of Bell's work have been organized by the Pasadena Art Museum (1972), Oakland Museum of Art (1973), Fort Worth Art Museum (1975 and 1977), Washington University in St. Louis (1976), Detroit Institute of Arts (1982), Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles (1986), Denver Museum of Art (1995), and Alberquerque Museum (1997). His work was also included in major group exhibitions such as The Responsive Eye at the Museum of Modern Art in New York (1965), Primary Structures at the Jewish Museum in New York (1966), Guggenheim International (1967), Documenta 4 (1968), and Venice Biennale (1976).
Larry Bell is known for his exploration of perceptualism through his use of light and glass in his sculptures, particularly his iconic glass cubes. His work often creates a sensual experience for the viewer, playing with reflection, transparency, and the way light interacts with surfaces. Bell's works are not just about the object itself, but about the experience of seeing and being in the space, a concept central to the Light and Space movement.

In 1968 Bell began to abandon the chrome frame and create larger cubes in which the effects of the planes of glass interact only with one another. This development led to Bell's glass panels, which stood eight feet tall, operated at an almost architectural scale, and could be arranged in countless configurations in the gallery space. In 1973 Bell moved to Taos, New Mexico, where he established a studio and created the huge fifty-six-panel adjustable glass structure The Iceberg and It's Shadow (1974). In the late 1970s Bell initiated his Vapor Drawings and Mirage Paintings, which extended the artist's investigations into perception, but this time on a flat plane. Since the late 1970s, Bell has engaged with such diverse practices as furniture design and bronze sculptures, as well as large-scale glass sculptures and installations like Moving Ways (1981–82), The Wind Wedge (1982), and Made for Arlosen (1992). Solo exhibitions of Bell's work have been organized by the Pasadena Art Museum (1972), Oakland Museum of Art (1973), Fort Worth Art Museum (1975 and 1977), Washington University in St. Louis (1976), Detroit Institute of Arts (1982), Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles (1986), Denver Museum of Art (1995), and Alberquerque Museum (1997). His work was also included in major group exhibitions such as The Responsive Eye at the Museum of Modern Art in New York (1965), Primary Structures at the Jewish Museum in New York (1966), Guggenheim International (1967), Documenta 4 (1968), and Venice Biennale (1976). Larry Bell is known for his exploration of perceptualism through his use of light and glass in his sculptures, particularly his iconic glass cubes. His work often creates a sensual experience for the viewer, playing with reflection, transparency, and the way light interacts with surfaces. Bell's works are not just about the object itself, but about the experience of seeing and being in the space, a concept central to the Light and Space movement.

Larry Bell
MELGL 25 (Medium Ellipse on Glass)
1985
+
Cubes

#larrybell #art #perceptualism #lightandspace #minimalism #perception

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Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (Remastered 2009)
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (Remastered 2009) YouTube video by The Beatles - Topic

#BirthdateUnknown, 1939: #BOTD: #HBD #LarryBell! #Artists #InstallationArtists #Sculptors #Minimalism #GeometricAbstraction #PeopleOnTheCoverOfSgtPepper
www.youtube.com/watch?v=VtXl...

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Art of the Day

Larry Bell — Various Shows

Cubes on cubes on cubes

#art #artphotography #LarryBell #hauserandwirth #dtla #artbasel #cubes

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