Have I Reasons
Work and Writings, 1993–2007
Robert Morris author Nena Tsouti-Schillinger editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Duke University Press
Published:14th Mar '08
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
A compilation of seminal works by Robert Morris, influential artist and critic, a key figure in Minimalist sculpture, Process Art, and Earthworks; this is heavily illustrated
A leading figure in postwar American art, Robert Morris is best known as a pioneer of Minimalist sculpture, Process Art, and earthworks. This title presents seventeen of Morris' essays. It includes reflections on Morris' own site-specific installations; and transcripts of seminars he conducted in conjunction with exhibitions.Robert Morris, a leading figure in postwar American art, is best known as a pioneer of minimalist sculpture, process art, and earthworks. Yet Morris has resisted affiliation with any one movement or style. An extraordinarily versatile artist, he has produced dances, performance pieces, prints, paintings, drawings, and installations, working with materials including plywood, felt, dirt, aluminum, steel mesh, fiberglass, and encaustic. Throughout his career, Morris has written influential critical essays, commenting on his own work as well as that of other artists, and exploring through text many of the theoretical concerns addressed in his artwork—about perception, materiality, space, and the process of artmaking. Have I Reasons presents seventeen of Morris’s essays, six of which have never been published before. Written over the past fifteen years, the essays, along with the volume’s many illustrations, provide an invaluable record of the recent thought of a major American artist.
The writings are arranged chronologically, beginning with “Indiana Street,” a vivid autobiographical account of the artist’s early years in Kansas City, Missouri. Have I Reasons includes reflections on Morris’s own site-specific installations; transcripts of seminars he conducted in conjunction with exhibitions; and the textual element of The Birthday Boy, the two-screen video-and-sound piece he installed at the Galleria dell’Accademia in Florence, Italy, on the occasion of the five hundredth anniversary of Michelangelo’s David. Essays range from original interpretations of Cézanne’s Mont Sainte-Victoire paintings and Jasper Johns’ early work to engagements with one of Morris’s most significant interlocutors, the philosopher Donald Davidson. Have I Reasons conveys not only Morris’s enduring deep interest in philosophy and issues of resemblance and representation but also his more recent turn toward directly addressing contemporary social and political issues such as corporate excess and preemptive belligerence.
“Have I Reasons is a complex collection of writings. The book challenges the reader on many levels . . . [and] affords an insight into the mind of an influential artist of our time.” - Brontë Coe, M/C Reviews
“Morris is an extremely good writer. . . . It is written so skilfully that when the essay stops there is a feeling of disappointment similar to reading an unfinished novel. . . . Many artists and writers have written about the influence of childhood on artistic work, but this is by far the most elegant and subtle I have read. . . . This is a very rich but open book. . . . [T]his book is a must have, written by an artist whose work has contributed to some of the most significant shifts in art practice of our time.” - Edward Allington, Art Monthly
“Morris has consistently been one of the most well read, articulate, and intensely self conscious artists in the last one hundred years. . . . Readers of Morris’s second volume of writings will be struck by the explicitly political viewpoint of such essays, as well as by the deft handling of philosophy and prose that graces even Morris’s more polemical writing in his old age.” - Melissa Ragain, Criticism
“[Robert Morris’s] career is most remarkable. And this book provides perhaps the largest reason why; he successfully navigated his way from art making to art theory with the development of a new genre of writing.” - Ben Schacter, Consciousness, Literature, and the Arts
“Have I Reasons is the authoritative text for the study of Robert Morris’s later work and for the historical reconsideration of his earlier work. Unrelentingly provocative and entertaining, the writings reflect his wonderfully quirky mind, his gift for narrative, his wide learning and curiosity, and his cool, laconic style combined with mordant outrage and irony.”—W. J. T. Mitchell, editor of Critical Inquiry and author of What Do Pictures Want?
“Robert Morris is one of the most important postwar American artists. Have I Reasons is a valuable resource for an understanding and reconsideration of his work and the postwar neo-avant-garde production in which it played such a pivotal role. Compared to his seminal earlier writings, those from the 1990s and beyond collected here are more insistently autobiographical, more overtly and straightforwardly political. This transformation is one that, at least in part, reflects a transformation in his visual art.”—Branden W. Joseph, author of Random Order: Robert Rauschenberg and the Neo-Avant-Garde
“Have I Reasons is a complex collection of writings. The book challenges the reader on many levels . . . [and] affords an insight into the mind of an influential artist of our time.” -- Brontë Coe * M/C Reviews *
“[Robert Morris’s] career is most remarkable. And this book provides perhaps the largest reason why; he successfully navigated his way from art making to art theory with the development of a new genre of writing.” -- Ben Schacter * Consciousness, Literature and the Arts *
“Morris has consistently been one of the most well read, articulate, and intensely self conscious artists in the last one hundred years. . . . Readers of Morris’s second volume of writings will be struck by the explicitly political viewpoint of such essays, as well as by the deft handling of philosophy and prose that graces even Morris’s more polemical writing in his old age.” -- Melissa Ragain * Criticism *
“Morris is an extremely good writer. . . . It is written so skilfully that when the essay stops there is a feeling of disappointment similar to reading an unfinished novel. . . . Many artists and writers have written about the influence of childhood on artistic work, but this is by far the most elegant and subtle I have read. . . . This is a very rich but open book. . . . [T]his book is a must have, written by an artist whose work has contributed to some of the most significant shifts in art practice of our time.” -- Edward Allington * Art Monthly *
ISBN: 9780822341383
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 626g
288 pages