1994-2005, Richard Serra
The Guggenheim Bilbao’s largest gallery is cavernous: 430 feet long by 80 feet wide. But that scale posed no problem for American sculptor Richard Serra. The artist composed his monumental work The Matter of Time in eight sections. Serra bent enormous sheets of steel into curving organic shapes. To do this, he worked with machinery that’s normally used to bend metal for the hulls of battleships.
Serra used a type of steel designed to develop a rusty patina, or film, over time. It appears cold and metallic in places. In other areas, it has a warm, velvety quality. The surface texture transforms with the light.
Metal isn’t Serra’s only medium in this work. “I consider that space is a material,” he explains. The negative space—the space around and between the metal walls—is as important as the positive space. This is because viewers exist in the negative space, experiencing Serra’s dizzying sculptures in relation to their own bodies. As visitors walk through The Matter of Time, they feel space and time expand and compress.