Lynda Benglis was born in Lake Charles, Louisiana in 1941. A pioneer of a form of abstraction in which each work is the result of materials in action—poured latex and foam, cinched metal, dripped ...
Lynda Benglis is an American artist best known for her use of poured sculptural forms made from wax, latex, metal, and foam. From the 1960s onwards, Benglis’ work has engaged with both the physicality ...
takes every inch of willpower not to touch and is as bodily and carnal as the wax paintings and poured latex sculptures for which Benglis is best known. Its seductive hot-pink surface undulates and ...
WHAT IF? brings together recent work by Lynda Benglis in a wide range of media. Ceramics enter into a dialogue with cast polyurethane sculptures, foam paintings and a new, never previously exhibited ...
Since the 1960s, Lynda Benglis has been celebrated for the free, ecstatic forms she has made that are simultaneously playful and visceral, organic and abstract. Benglis began her career in the midst ...
Save videos to watch later, or make a selection to play back-to-back using the autoplay feature. Artist Lynda Benglis reunites with her first fountain, The Wave of the World (1983–84), which went ...
Artist, Lynda Benglis: My name is Lynda Benglis. The gold piece that’s here, Ghost Dance/Pedmarks, done in 1998, is a piece that I began working actually as a form in clay, a kind of torso form, and I ...