Bruce Nauman

Bruce Nauman is an uncompromising and restlessly inventive artist, whose work spans a wide range of media including sculpture, performance, video, drawing, neon and installations. Born in 1941 in Fort Wayne, Indiana, Nauman has become one of the leading artistic voices of his generation, known for his provocative and often unsettling explorations of language, perception and the human body.

Nauman’s early education in mathematics and physics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, followed by an MFA from the University of California, Davis, laid the foundation for his conceptual approach to art. His work challenges traditional boundaries, constantly pushing the limits of what art can be and inviting viewers to experience through sensory perception, body and mind.

Nauman first produced waxen body casts in the 1960s when he came of age as an artist. His 1967 wax cast From Hand to Mouth, which also explores the form of the hand in a sculptural language game, is a seminal work. In the mid-1980s, Nauman revisited and began to expand upon this line of aesthetic questioning, a development that would continue throughout his career.

Not satisfied with simply focusing on one medium, the artist once remarked, ‘I’ve always had overlapping ways of going about my work, I’ve never been able to stick to one thing.’ He also began working with neon in the 1960s, creating unusual, off-kilter works that mocked the seriality and literalness of Minimalism, as well as the replication and repetition of hard-edged elemental geometric forms.

Nauman began exploring ideas on language and meaning and their linguistic construction in his image-works with slight shifting letters in the 1970s. The idea of tension inhering in word play came to Nauman when, in the later 1960s he created a video series based on an earlier set of screen prints entitled Studies for Holograms. By the 1980s, Nauman returned to neon tubing in earnest, creating significant, now iconic works, among them Eat/War (1986). The 1980s brought forward outstanding output from the artist that attracted an extraordinarily large public, numerous gallery shows, and many museum exhibitions.

Bruce Nauman has dedicated over five decades of his life and career to expressing in every conceivable artistic medium. Whether working in freestanding sculptural objects, drawings, neon tubing, installations, videos, body art, sound pieces, or language games, postmodern master Nauman makes work that is resoundingly idiosyncratic. He has featured in five editions of Documenta, won the Golden Lion at the 1999 Venice Biennale and exhibited widely in New York, Paris, Basel, London, and more.


Bruce Nauman (B. 1941)

Henry Moore Bound to Fail

Bruce Nauman (B. 1941)

Untitled (Hand Group)

Bruce Nauman (b. 1941)

Andrew Head/Andrew Head, Stacked

Bruce Nauman (B. 1941)

Untitled (Three Small Animals)

Bruce Nauman (b. 1941)

Fish Fountain

Bruce Nauman (b. 1941)

White Breathing

Bruce Nauman (B. 1941)

No, No, New Museum

Bruce Nauman (b. 1941)

From Hand to Mouth

Bruce Nauman (b. 1941)

Device to Hold a Box at a Slight Angle

Bruce Nauman (B. 1941)

Marching Figure

Bruce Nauman (b. 1941)

Untitled (Hand Circle)

BRUCE NAUMAN (b. 1941)

None Sing Neon Sign

Bruce Nauman (b. 1941)

Untitled (Hand Pair)

Bruce Nauman (b. 1941)

Double Poke in the Eye II

Bruce Nauman (b. 1941)

William T. Wiley or Ray Johnson Trap

BRUCE NAUMAN (B. 1941)

Untitled (from Fifteen Pairs of Hands)

BRUCE NAUMAN (B. 1941)

Double Poke in the Eye II

Bruce Nauman (b. 1941)

Coffee Spilled and Balloon Dog

Bruce Nauman (B.1941)

Double Poke in the Eye II

Bruce Nauman (b. 1941)

Untitled (Study for Underground Tunnel Made from Half Circle, Half Square and Half Triangle)

Bruce Nauman (b. 1941)

Good Boy Bad Boy

Bruce Nauman (b. 1941)

Untitled (Wax Cat)

BRUCE NAUMAN (B. 1941)

Good Boy Bad Boy

Bruce Nauman (b. 1941)

Run from Fear, Fun from Rear

Bruce Nauman (b. 1941)

Template of the Left Half of My Body

Bruce Nauman (b. 1941)

Setting a Good Corner (Allegory & Metaphor)

BRUCE NAUMAN (B. 1941)

Pay Attention

Bruce Nauman (b. 1941)

Rolled Up Body Gasket

Bruce Nauman (b. 1941)

Study for First Poem Piece

Bruce Nauman (b. 1941)

Pay Attention (Cordes 16; Gemini 434)

BRUCE NAUMAN (B. 1941)

Help Me Hurt Me (State), from Sundry Obras Nuevas

Bruce Nauman (b. 1941)

Concrete Shaft 2/3 Underground

Bruce Nauman (b. 1941)

Studies for holograms a-e (Cordes 1-5)

Bruce Nauman (B. 1941)

Untitled (Crossbeams)

Bruce Nauman (b. 1941)

Untitled (Ring)

BRUCE NAUMAN

Pay Attention (C. 16; Gemini 434)

BRUCE NAUMAN (B. 1941)

Help Me Hurt Me, from Sundry Obras Nuevas

BRUCE NAUMAN (B. 1941)

Help Me Hurt Me from Sundry Obras Nuevas

BRUCE NAUMAN (B. 1941)

Clown Taking a Shit

Bruce Nauman (b. 1941)

Partial Truth

Bruce Nauman (b. 1941)

Studies for Holograms

BRUCE NAUMAN (B. 1941)

Clown Taking a Shit