Sean Scully's 'Black Square' by David Carrier - Hyperallergic
7 April 2020
Sean Scully's 'Black Square' 2020 is the subject of investigation for David Carrier in Hyperallergic. The article explores connections to Josef Albers's Homage to the Square; Kazimir Malevich's infamous Black Square (1915) and Henri Matisse’s famously enigmatic French-Window at Collioure (1914), with a window apparently opening onto a pit-black night.
“Black Square” is an appropriate response to springtime 2020 because it offers abstractly a deeply felt response to our present ways of living. In discussing some of my responses — some perhaps oddly subjective, a few guided by his suggestions — I do not mean to cut off other ways of thinking. The essential generosity of Scully’s art lies, so I believe, in its openness.
And like his best works, “Black Square” is oddly exhilarating even though (or, especially because) it is initially grim. A successful artist, it has been said, is someone who makes other people also creative. You need to learn to trust the ways Scully sets your mind in motion."
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Sean Scully, Black Square, 2020, Oil on aluminum, 85 x 75 inches, 215 x 190.5cm
© Sean Scully
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