Humanities › Visual Arts Minimalism or Minimal Art Mid-1960s to the Present Share Flipboard Email Print Visual Arts Art & Artists Art History Architecture By Beth Gersh-Nesic Beth Gersh-Nesic Art History Expert Ph.D., Art History, City University of New York Graduate Center M.A., Art History, State University of New York at Binghamton B.A., Art History, State University of New York at Binghamton Beth S. Gersh-Nesic, Ph.D., is the founder and director of the New York Arts Exchange. She teaches art history at the College of New Rochelle. Learn about our Editorial Process Updated on October 22, 2017 Minimalism or Minimal Art is a form of abstraction. It focuses on the most essential and elemental aspects of an object. The art critic Barbara Rose explained in her groundbreaking article "ABC Art," Art in America (October-November 1965), that this "empty, repetitious, uninflected" aesthetic could be found in the visual arts, dance, and music. (Merce Cunningham and John Cage would be examples in dance and music.) Minimal art aims to reduce its content to rigorous clarity. It may try to rid itself of evocative effect, but it does not always succeed. Agnes Martin's faint graphite lines drawn on pale flat surfaces seem to radiate with human delicacy and humility. In a small room with low light, they can be exceptionally moving. How Long Minimalism Has Been a Movement Minimalism reached its peak during the mid-1960s to the mid-1970s, but many of its practitioners are still alive and well today. Dia Beacon, a museum of mainly Minimalist pieces, exhibits a permanent collection of the best-known artists in the movement. For example, Michael Heizer's North, East, South, West (1967/2002) is permanently installed on the premises. Some artists, such as Richard Tuttle and Richard Serra, are now considered Post-Minimalists. What Are the Key Characteristics of Minimalism? Clarity and simplicity of form.No narrative.No anecdotal content or references.Emphasis on pure shapes.Often monochromatic surfaces. Best Known Minimalists: Agnes MartinDonald JuddMichael HeizerRobert MorrisRobert SerraRichard TuttleTony SmithAnn TruitRonald BladenDan FlavinSol LeWittRobert MangoldDorothea Rockburne Suggested Reading Battcock, Gregory (ed.). Minimal Art: A Critical Anthology.New York: Dutton, 1968. Cite this Article Format mla apa chicago Your Citation Gersh-Nesic, Beth. "Minimalism or Minimal Art Mid-1960s to the Present." ThoughtCo, Jan. 28, 2020, thoughtco.com/minimalism-or-minimal-art-art-history-183317. Gersh-Nesic, Beth. (2020, January 28). Minimalism or Minimal Art Mid-1960s to the Present. Retrieved from https://www.thoughtco.com/minimalism-or-minimal-art-art-history-183317 Gersh-Nesic, Beth. "Minimalism or Minimal Art Mid-1960s to the Present." ThoughtCo. https://www.thoughtco.com/minimalism-or-minimal-art-art-history-183317 (accessed March 30, 2023). copy citation