How to Make Art That Withstands the Test of Time
by Alexandra Ossola
Mar 24, 2015
3 minutes
In the 1930s, Russian-born sculptor Naum Gabo started experimenting with a thin, plastic material called celluloid. Previously used as film for photography or to make cheap jewelry, celluloid in Gabo’s hands became translucent geometric structures that were often suspended in mid-air. Art critic Herbert Read wrote that Gabo was using “new materials…[for] a new generation to create with them the monuments of a new civilization.” His pieces made their way into the top art collections in the world.
But by and reactive material, and was infamous for . Despite conservators’ diligence to try to preserve his works, . Gabo himself called many of them irreparable.
You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.
Start your free 30 days