Leslie Sacks Gallery
Santa Monica

Artists
Works Available By
- Nina Chanel Abney
- Derrick Adams
- Etel Adnan
- El Anatsui
- William H. Bailey
- Jean-Michel Basquiat
- Willie Bester
- Frank Bowling
- Georges Braque
- Brian Calvin
- Marc Chagall
- Christo and Jeanne-Claude
- Chuck Close
- Will Cotton
- Amy Cutler
- Richard Diebenkorn
- Jim Dine
- Sam Francis
- Helen Frankenthaler
- Gajin Fujita
- Hannes Harrs
- Daniel Heidkamp
- Damien Hirst
- David Hockney
- Asif Hoque
- Jasper Johns
- Anish Kapoor
- Alex Katz
- Ellsworth Kelly
- Kim Minjung
- R.B. Kitaj
- Willem de Kooning
- Jeff Koons
- Shio Kusaka
- Sol LeWitt
- Roy Lichtenstein
- Jake Longstreth
- Nicola López
- Eddie Martinez
- Joan Miró
- Ed Moses
- Robert Motherwell
- Alice Neel
- Jules Pascin
- Beverly Pepper
- Raymond Pettibon
- Pablo Picasso
- Marc Quinn
- Robert Rauschenberg
- Robin Rhode
- James Rosenquist
- Ed Ruscha
- Yinka Shonibare
- David Shrigley
- Frank Stella
- Donald Sultan
- Wayne Thiebaud
- Mickalene Thomas
- Mungo Thomson
- Manolo Valdés
- Edoardo Villa
- Andy Warhol
- Stanley Whitney
- Jonas Wood
- Clare Woods
- Hiejin Yoo
Sol LeWitt
(American, 1928 – 2007)
Sol LeWitt was an iconic American artist whose work helped to establish both Minimalism and Conceptual Art. LeWitt’s practice was based primarily within his own intellect, establishing a rubric of formal instructions which his assistants followed to create the works. Some of the artist’s most integral pieces are his Wall Drawings, in which he explored myriad variations of applying drawn lines onto walls. “When an artist uses a conceptual form of art, it means that all of the planning and decisions are made beforehand and the execution is a perfunctory affair. The idea becomes a machine that makes the art,” he wrote in his seminal 1967 essay Paragraphs on Conceptual Art. Born Solomon LeWitt on September 9, 1928 in Hartford...
