meditation and reflection in art   
Lisa DeBoer   

 

 

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Seated Buddha Akshobya

Seated Jain Tirthankara

Chinese Garden (Astor Court)

Mihrab

Scholar Looking at a Waterfall

Water Goddess

Vertical Flute

The Heart of the Andes

Figure Seated by Curtained Window

Gertrude Stein

Beside the Sea

Water Lilies

Autumn Landscape

Spectrum V


Metropolitan Museum of Art

 

 

 

Spectrum V


Spectrum V, 1969, Ellsworth Kelly
Oil on canvas
Each panel: Height 84 1/4 inches, Width 34 1/4 inches
Total: Height 84 1/4 inches, Width 443 inches
69.210 a-m

"By dividing his 1969 Spectrum V into thirteen tones, painted flatly and evenly on thirteen identical panels, Ellsworth Kelly created sublte variations within a monumental format. Color here is an almost-architectural element, intensifying our sense of perspective and articulating the wall as a totality." (MMA Bulletin, Oct. 1970)

The practice of meditation can include focusing the mind on a single object, such as a symbol, a mantra, or a color. No image is necessary, but rather the pure color becomes the focus of the meditation. In this piece, the viewer is able to meditate on Kelly's spectrum of color as a whole, reflect upon the differences and variations between the colors, or focus on in each individual tone. In some interpretations, green is a symbol of renewal, representing life and growth.

 

Metropolitan Museum of Art, Central Catalog, New York, New York.

Moszynska, Anna. "Post-painterly Abstraction." The Grove Dictionary of Art Online, ed. L. Macy (Accessed 17 September 2002), <http://www.groveart.com>

Pittari, Michael. "Atlanta." Art Papers 24, no. 1, 39-40, January/February 2000.

Ratcliff, Carter. "Kelly's Spectrum of Experience." Art in America, v. 69, Summer 1981, p. 98-101.

Sims, Patterson. "Kelly, Ellsworth." The Grove Dictionary of Art Online, ed. L. Macy (Accessed 17 September 2002), <http://www.groveart.com>

 

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