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Larry Bell
Cubes
March 18-April 29, 2006
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The Frank Lloyd Gallery is pleased to announce an exhibition of Larry Bell's glass cubes from March 18 through April 29. A new series of transparent boxes, which continue the artist's work with the properties of light, space and reflection, will be presented. The sculptures, made by a highly refined process of vacuum coating transparent glass panels, present an illusive and phenomenal experience.

Larry Bell's work emerged in the mid-1960's, and is often included in major exhibitions of Minimal art. His work was shown in the first exhibit to focus on Minimal art, "Primary Structures", at the Jewish Museum in 1966. Bell's work was also included in the seminal Museum of Modern Art exhibit, "The Responsive Eye" in 1965. More recently, Bell's work was prominently presented in the Museum of Contemporary Art's show, "A Minimal Future? Art as Object 1958-1968", and discussed at length in the catalogue essays.

This Frank Lloyd Gallery exhibition marks Larry Bell's return to his signature form, the glass cube, and his return to Los Angeles. Bell is one of the most prominent and influential artists to have come out of the Los Angeles art scene of the 1960s, first showing at the Huysman Gallery, and then at Ferus. He became associated with the most important movements at the time, such as Light and Space art and what was described as "Finish Fetish" (a term coined by the late critic John Coplans). Bell has continued to investigate the complexities of highly refined surface treatments of glass, as well as large-scale sculptural installations.

Larry Bell was born in Chicago in 1938, and currently resides in Taos, New Mexico. The artist now maintains studios in Taos, New Mexico and Venice, California. Having grown up in the San Fernando Valley, Bell attended Chouinard Art School in Los Angeles from 1957 through 1959, where he was a student of Robert Irwin. He was extraordinarily successful as a young artist, and showed regularly at Pace Gallery in New York between 1965 and 1973. In September of 2005, Pace Wildenstein presented a show of works titled "Larry Bell: The Sixties".

His work is in public collections throughout the world, including The Museum of Modern Art, New York; The Albright-Knox Gallery, Buffalo; Art Institute of Chicago; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; Los Angeles County Museum; Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge; Museum Ludwig, Cologne; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam; Tate Gallery, London; Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; and the Whitney Museum of American Art.