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Collections

Richard Serra
Band2006

On view:
Broad Contemporary Art Museum, floor 1
Large-scale weathered steel sculpture with sweeping, wave-like curved panels covered in rust-orange patina, installed on a concrete gallery floor
Large-scale weathered steel sculpture consisting of multiple massive curved and torqued plates with rust-brown oxidized surfaces, installed in a white gallery space with concrete floors.
Large-scale steel sculpture installation in a white gallery space, featuring four massive curved weathered steel plates with rust-brown oxidized surfaces, arranged to create enclosed elliptical forms on a concrete floor beneath track lighting.
Large-scale weathered steel sculpture with sweeping curved and tilted plates in warm rust tones, installed in a white-walled gallery; a standing figure nearby conveys the work's monumental scale.
Large-scale weathered steel sculpture installation comprising several massive curved and conical forms with rust-brown oxidized surfaces, arranged across a white gallery space with polished concrete floors.
Artist or Maker
Richard Serra
United States, 1938-2024
Title
Band
Date Made
2006
Medium
Steel
Dimensions
Overall: 153 x 846 x 440 in. (388.62 x 2148.84 x 1117.6 cm); Plate thickness: 2 in. (5.08 cm)
Credit Line
Purchased with funds provided by Eli and Edythe L. Broad
Accession Number
M.2007.122
Classification
Sculpture
Collecting Area
Contemporary Art
Curatorial Notes
Band may qualify as Richard Serra's magnum opus, representing the fullest expression of the formal vocabulary proffered by his monumental steel arcs and torqued ellipses of the 1980s and '90s. Band is among the most formally elegant and technically complex works of Serra's oeuvre, a sculpture that took him two-and-a-half years to develop and which he described as "a completely new form for me." Whereas the arcs and ellipses had a stolid austerity and an uncompromising formal logic, Band introduces a new quotient of fluidity and sense of freedom, undulating with the apparent ease of a ribbon, flowing back and forth with almost balletic grace. Yet, it is plainly - obdurately - a manifestation of its own titanic size and weight, indomitable in its mass, volume, and ownership of space.
Serra's art has always forcefully asserted its materiality and evinced the process of its fabrication. Band is no exception. It is a daunting display of its own immensity, evoking the incomprehensible mechanics of handling some two-hundred tons of hot steel and the precision engineering that goes into shaping it, as well as the placing of its component parts, which requires tolerances down to a single millimeter. At twelve feet high and more than seventy feet long, the work is vast even by Serra's monumental standard. Careening aesthetically between bravado and elegance, Band bespeaks the ambitiousness of Serra's artistic vision and his commitment to its physical realization.
Howard Fox, Curator of Contemporary Art, 2008