
TAKEN FROM HERE TO WHERE IT CAME FROM AND TAKEN TO A PLACE AND USED IN SUCH A MANNER THAT IT CAN ONLY REMAIN AS A REPRESENTATION OF WHAT IT WAS WHERE IT CAME FROM
<p>Lawrence Weiner established himself as one of the leading figures in the Conceptual Art Movement during the late 1960s by creating works that challenge traditional assumptions about the nature of the art object. Using language as his medium, Weiner set out to question the conventional relationship between artist and viewer and to redefine standard systems of artistic display and distribution. In 1968 he issued a statement of intent, outlining the three conditions in which his works could exist: they could be built by him; fabricated by someone else; or not constructed at all. His works have the potential for being realized in countless ways and contexts; they may be shown outdoors as a public project, published in a book, printed on a matchbook cover, or simply spoken. He is best known, however, for written phrases presented on gallery or museum walls, typically in stenciled or vinyl lettering. Weiner felt the permanence and integrity of a linguistic construction, presented as a title in the form of a simple descriptive phrase on the wall, was less vulnerable to change over time than an actual sculpture. This work—which describes a physical act of displacement as a metaphor for representation—and its title are one and the same.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1980
- Dimensions
- Dimensions vary with installation
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Lawrence Weiner
Artist

Painting
Lawrence Charles Weiner was an artist born and raised in New York City. One of the central figures in the formation of Conceptual Art in the 1960s, Lawrence Weiner explored the potentials of language as a sculptural medium. For him language could be presented in any format able to discourse with typical art subjects such as: language installed on a wall, printed as text in a book or catalog, spoken or performed in a film, spoken aloud in conversation, simply remembered, et cetera; as Lawrence explains in 1970:"As to construction please remember that... there is no correct way to construct the piece as there is no incorrect way to construct it. If the piece is built it constitutes not how the piece looks but only how it could look."
Full artist profile →More
More by Lawrence Weiner
ENOUGH
2021 · Offset lithograph
123
2020 · Cut and pasted white wove paper, with watercolor, colored pencil, graphite pencil, and metallic silver ink, on cream wove paper
Wir sind keine Enten auf dem Teich, wir sind Schiffe auf dem Meer from 25 Years of FUN
2015 · Offset lithograph from a boxed set of eight editions and multiples in various mediums
Water in Milk Exists
2008 · Video (color, sound)
Turning Some Pages
2007 · Video (color, sound)
A Bookcase for onestar press
2007 · Bookcase with set of 153 artist's books and digital files
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Lawrence Weiner
- Year
- 1980
- Dimensions
- Dimensions vary with installation
- Watts ID
- WW-1980-133387
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified





