Born in Rahway, New Jersey, Richard Tuttle creates minimalist geometric paintings that explore the possibilities of lines. His small-size work has sometimes been puzzling to his New York peers, many... Read full biography
Born in Rahway, New Jersey, Richard Tuttle creates minimalist geometric paintings that explore the possibilities of lines. His small-size work has sometimes been puzzling to his New York peers, many whom create large-scale works. However, in 2004, Tuttle also turned his creativity to large pieces... Read full biography
Born in Rahway, New Jersey, Richard Tuttle creates minimalist geometric paintings that explore the possibilities of lines. His small-size work has sometimes been puzzling to his New York peers, many whom create large-scale works. However, in 2004, Tuttle also turned his creativity to large pieces with his installation, "Splash", his first public art project, which is a mural 90 by 150 feet with about 140,000 pieces of colroed glass and white ceramic tile. In a "New York Times" interview,... Read full biography
Born in Rahway, New Jersey, Richard Tuttle creates minimalist geometric paintings that explore the possibilities of lines. His small-size work has sometimes been puzzling to his New York peers, many whom create large-scale works. However, in 2004, Tuttle also turned his creativity to large pieces with his installation, "Splash", his first public art project, which is a mural 90 by 150 feet with about 140,000 pieces of colroed glass and white ceramic tile. In a "New York Times" interview, December 3, 2004, Tuttle commented on any seeming contradiction in this new work: "There have always been questions of invisibility with my work, its small size, but there's also an invisibility connected to supersize. There's a threshold with how big... Read full biography
Born in Rahway, New Jersey, Richard Tuttle creates minimalist geometric paintings that explore the possibilities of lines. His small-size work has sometimes been puzzling to his New York peers, many whom create large-scale works. However, in 2004, Tuttle also turned his creativity to large pieces with his installation, "Splash", his first public art project, which is a mural 90 by 150 feet with about 140,000 pieces of colroed glass and white ceramic tile. In a "New York Times" interview, December 3, 2004, Tuttle commented on any seeming contradiction in this new work: "There have always been questions of invisibility with my work, its small size, but there's also an invisibility connected to supersize. There's a threshold with how big things can get and we can comprehend them. Invisible small or invisible large doesn't make much difference". Tuttle was born in Rahway, New... Read full biography
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