1972
Mediums: copper, enamel, aluminum.
Location: the Tate Modern Gallery, London (the UK).
Donald Judd created his box-shaped works for several years, gradually complicating their form, using different colours and materials. In the work, which, like other creations of the artist, has no name, he used a copper coating and bright red industrial paint. These materials contrast and blend unusually, giving the simple form of work a hidden meaning and sound. Judd specially made the sculpture horizontal, comparing it with the simple vertical composition, which the viewer looks at from bottom. The box of an abstract artist is below the level of a person’s eyes and allows you to look at yourself closely and even look inside, how viewers usually do.