Dan Flavin
Jamaica, New York, 1933 - 1996, Riverhead, New York
In the summer of 1961, while working as a guard at the American Museum of Natural History, New York, Flavin started to make sketches for sculptures in which electric lights were incorporated. Late in that year, he made his first light sculptures; he called these “icons.” In 1963, he began to work with colored fluorescent tubes. His sculpture was shown in a solo exhibition, some light, at the Kaymar Gallery, New York, in 1964. In 1967, Flavin was a guest instructor of design at the University of North Carolina in Greensboro. By 1968, he had developed his sculpture into room-size environments of light; this year, he outlined an entire gallery in ultraviolet light at Documenta in Kassel. A retrospective of Flavin’s work was organized by the National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, in 1969; the exhibition traveled to the Jewish Museum in New York in 1970. Among Flavin’s numerous exhibitions in Europe were solo shows in Cologne in 1974 and Basel in 1975. He has executed many commissions, including the lighting of several tracks at Grand Central Station in New York in 1976.
--from Guggenheim website
Person TypeIndividual
Terms
- Male
Hartford, Connecticut, 1928 - 2007, New York, New York
Nashville, Tennessee, 1930 - 2019, Grenwich Village, New York, New York
Chicago, Illinois, 1939 - 2004, Chicago, Illinois
Rochester, Indiana, 1927 - 2011, Manhattan, New York
b. 1939, San Francisco, California; d. 2024, Orient, New York
Deutschbaselitz, Saxony, Germany, 1938 -
Cleves, Germany, 1921 - 1986, Düsseldorf, Germany
Albany, California, 1935 - 2013, Los Angeles, California
Bleckede, Germany, 1945 - 2007, Düsseldorf, Germany