Richard Tuttle, 18 x 24 (III) 16 – detail, 2023 (paper, graphite, styrofoam, acrylic paint)
Richard Tuttle
18 x 24
September 7 ⏤ October 21, 2023
Galerie Greta Meert is pleased to present Richard Tuttle’s sixth solo exhibition with the gallery, 18×24, introducing a series of wall pieces created over the past years in his studio in New Mexico.

In this new body of work, Tuttle moulds sheets of foam board into delicate painterly surfaces, the everydayness of this material transcending into a mirage-like abstraction. The artist begins by drawing on an 18 x 24-inch sheet of paper and derives the forms of each piece from shapes, gestures, and written words. These drawings are the starting point for the three-dimensional forms carved into foam and hung on the wall directly above the original drawing, the graphic obscuring its content. The underlying calligraphy of the drawing is finally revealed in sculptural form, which Tuttle embellishes with lyrical gestures in rich, often monochromatic color.
18 x 24 (III) 1
2023


paper, graphite, styrofoam, acrylic paint 44 x 44 cm ref. 4924
18 x 24 (III) 3
2023


paper, graphite, styrofoam, acrylic paint 48 x 36 cm ref. 4926
Installation view, Richard Tuttle, 18 x 24, Galerie Greta Meert, 2023
The resulting work combines the lightness of materials and forms with the pleasure of language and words to create an energetic, almost therapeutic effect. Tuttle likens the process of intentionally hiding text elements to an ancient Mayan cylinder pot, in which original incised drawings were covered up with gesso and painted. Tuttle refers to this process as a ‘methodology’ through which he explores the connection or intersection between the linguistic and visual worlds.
18 x 24 (III) 4
2023


paper, graphite, styrofoam, acrylic paint 41,5 x 33 cm ref. 4927
18 x 24 (III) 5
2023


paper, graphite, styrofoam, acrylic paint 34 x 78 cm ref. 4928
18 x 24 (III) 10
2023


paper, graphite, styrofoam, acrylic paint 34 x 34 cm ref. 4933
Installation view, Richard Tuttle, 18 x 24, Galerie Greta Meert, 2023
Intimate and idiosyncratic, Tuttle’s work is widely recognised for its ability to evoke poetry from ordinary, everyday materials and forms. Richard Tuttle’s approach to each new work is neither as a painting or a sculpture, but a synthesis of different media. His work has been characterised by the unconventional use of beauty as a fundamental means of influencing life itself. Over six decades, Tuttle has considered the myriad ways in which light, scale, color, and systems of meaning flow from his art into the world.
18 x 24 (III) 12
2023


paper, graphite, styrofoam, acrylic paint 32 x 37 cm ref. 4935
18 x 24 (III) 13
2023


paper, graphite, styrofoam, acrylic paint 40,5 x 50 cm ref. 4936
Installation view, Richard Tuttle, 18 x 24, Galerie Greta Meert, 2023
Richard Tuttle’s direct and apparently simple use of objects and gestures reflects his meticulous attention to material and experience. Rejecting the rationality and precision of Minimalism, Tuttle embraces a handcrafted quality in his invention of forms that emphasise line, shape, color, and space as central concerns. He has resisted medium-specific labeling of his work, using the term drawing to encompass what could otherwise be termed sculpture, painting, collage, installation, and assemblage. Overturning traditional constraints of material, medium, and method, Tuttle’s works sensitise viewers to their own perceptive faculties. His working process, where one series gives rise to the next, is united by a consistent search to create objects that are expressions of their own totality.
18 x 24 (III) 14
2023


paper, graphite, styrofoam, acrylic paint 46,5 x 44,5 cm ref. 4937
18 x 24 (III) 17
2023


paper, graphite, styrofoam, acrylic paint 23 x 37 cm ref. 4945
18 x 24 (III) 18
2023


paper, graphite, styrofoam, acrylic paint 45 x 54,5 cm ref. 4946
Installation view, Richard Tuttle, 18 x 24, Galerie Greta Meert, 2023
18 x 24 (III) 20
2023


paper, graphite, styrofoam, acrylic paint 27 x 28 cm ref. 4948
18 x 24 (III) 21
2023


paper, graphite, styrofoam, acrylic paint 30 x 26,5 cm ref. 4949
18 x 24 (III) 22
2023


paper, graphite, styrofoam, acrylic paint 46 x 42,5 cm ref. 4950
Installation view, Richard Tuttle, 18 x 24, Galerie Greta Meert, 2023
Richard Tuttle, Stories I – XX, MER publisher, 2021
We are delighted to announce the launch event of the publication Richard Tuttle: Stories I-XX. Originally published in 2021 in parallel with the solo exhibition of the same name, its launch was delayed due to covid restrictions. Richard Tuttle will be joined by Luc Derycke for a public talk as part of the launch event.

Saturday, September 9 at 5pm
In presence of the artist
Installation view, Richard Tuttle, 18 x 24, Galerie Greta Meert, 2023
Richard Tuttle (b. 1941, Rahway, NJ, USA) lives and works in New York City; Abiqui , New Mexico, and Mount Desert, Maine. Since his first exhibition at Betty Parsons gallery in 1965, his work has been the subject of over two hundred solo exhibitions internationally, and numerous monographic publications. In 2014, he realised a commission for the Turbine Hall at Tate Modern, which coincided with the retrospective solo exhibition I Don’t Know or The Weave of Textile Language at the Whitechapel Gallery in London. The comprehensive survey exhibition The Art of Richard Tuttle was organised by the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art in 2005 and travelled to the Whitney in New York, the Des Moines Art Center in Iowa, the Dallas Museum of Art, the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, and ended its journey at the MOCA, Los Angeles through 2007.

Other recent solo exhibitions include Introduction to Practice, M WOODS, Beijing, China (2019); Light and Colour, Mu.ZEE, Oostende, Belgium (2017); De Hallen, Haarlem, Netherlands (2017); Καλλίρροος kallirroos sch n-fliessend, Kunstmuseum Winterthur, Switzerland (2016); al Cielo de Noche de Lima, Proyecto AMIL, Lima, and Museo de Arte de Lima (MALI), Peru (2016); Critical Edge, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA (2016); Wire Pieces, Pulitzer Arts Foundation, St Louis, USA (2015); Slide, Bergen Kunsthall, Norway (2012).