In the mid-1960s Baldessari began to reconsider not just painting but the practice of artmaking itself. Isolated from major art centers, living in sleepy National City, near San Diego, California, Baldessari thought about his painting activity and realized that texts—intellectual, occasionally ironic strings of words in particular—could often express artistic solutions better than representational paintings. He hired a commercial sign painter to produce the lettering on his canvases, upsetting the notion that the artist's hand in creating art is as important as the look of the artwork itself. In What Is Painting, Baldessari appropriates a text he found in an instructional book, turning sentences on how to compose an artwork into a self-referential painting.
From the Collection: 1960-69, March 26, 2016 - March 12, 2017.
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Conceptual art
In the 1960s, many artists experimented with art that emphasized ideas over objects and materials traditionally associated with art making.
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