Robert Irwin
untitled
1968-69
acrylic lacquer on formed acrylic plastic
Liz Larner
2 as 3 and some, too
1997-8
mulberry paper, steel and watercolor
Richard Tuttle
44th wire Piece
wire and template for pencil line
1972
charles ray
how a table works
1986
Gabriel Orozco
Toilet Ventilator
1997/2000
fans and toilet paper
Splitting 1974
Black and White photo collage
30x40 inches
Bruce Nauman
Four Corner Piece
1970
Beginning in the mid-1960s, Bruce Nauman incorporated video into complex installations in which experience coalesces into form at the same time that the position of the viewer is exposed and challenged. Four Corner Piece is a square construction of tall white walls in which slightly smaller white walls stand, forming a narrow passageway. Alternating between the four corners of the passageway, video cameras and monitors sit on the floor, the arrangement of which prevents the viewer from glimpsing his or her own image as it is recorded in real time. The radical limitation of movement and the desire to control one’s own image that the work instills recalls on one hand rats in a maze and on the other totalitarian surveillance.
Bruce Nauman (b. 1941, Fort Wayne, Indiana; lives and works in Galisteo, New Mexico)
Four Corner Piece, 1970
Installation with four cameras and four monitors
Dimensions variable
The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles
Purchased with funds provided by the Collectors Committee
(Source: moca.org)