Untitled
1940
20th century
52 1/2 in. x 62 in. x 13 in. (133.35 cm x 157.48 cm x 33.02 cm)
Charles Biederman,
American,
(1906–2004)
Object Type:
Sculpture and Installations
Creation Place:
North America, United States
Medium and Support:
painted wood and steel
Credit Line:
Carleton College Art Collection, gift of Lydia Hedin, class of 1933, and Raymond F. Hedin
Accession Number:
2000.016
Charles Biederman is a Minnesotan who makes his home in Red Wing. he was one of the first artists to work in a completely abstract geometric language as a way to responding to the dynamic forces that make up our world. It hangs in Carleton's Boliou Hall, a precocious example of modernist architecture on a rural college campus. The relief is a perfect fit with Boliou because its style and use of primary colors, particularly the bold use of red, complement the building's design.
This untitled piece is a gift from Lydia Hedin '33. Her husband, a doctor, commissioned the work to decorate the Interstate Medical Clinic, which in 1940 was one of the first modernist medical buildings in southern Minnesota.
- Laurel Bradley, Carleton College Calendar, 2005