Larry Bell explores the ethereal nature of glass in Monaco
Larry Bell's retrospective at Hauser & Wirth, Monaco, unites old and new work

In the film that accompanies Larry Bell’s new exhibition at Hauser & Wirth Monaco, the 84-year-old artist is seen from behind, peering through a small aperture in the middle of an enormous, bank vault-style circular door. With his brimmed hat and braces, the artist could easily pass for Heisenberg or Oppenheimer observing some atomic experiment, and yet, given Bell’s highly scientific approach, the comparison goes beyond mere appearances.
The door belongs to Bell’s vacuum-coating machine (affectionately known to Bell as ‘The Tank’), a cylinder ten feet long and seven across, specially commissioned in 1969 to facilitate production of his early Standing Walls. These large-scale sheets of glass, seamlessly joined with silicone into corners, squares and zigzags, mark a departure from Bell’s comparably robust, metal-framed glass cubes produced in the 1960s, towards something purer, more ethereal and, in the artist’s words, more ‘improbable’.
‘Larry Bell: Works from the 1970s’ at Hauser & Wirth, Monaco
Larry Bell, The Blue Gate, 2021
Within the tank’s airless seal, Bell plays with the molecular structure of his sculpture's surfaces, evaporating metals at high temperatures to maintain their crystalline structure and coat the glass in gossamer films of aluminium or silicon oxide. As Bell simply puts it: ‘There are things that can be done with metals and surfaces inside an environment that contains no air that cannot be done in the presence of air.’ By layering these films and altering the opacity or reflectivity of the glass, Bell’s Standing Walls become places of performance and optical distortion, activated only by the presence of a viewer.
Four of Bell’s largest and most ambitious Standing Walls from the early 1970s are shown in Hauser & Wirth’s cavernous subterranean gallery. Lit by an oculus that floods the space with Riviera sunshine, each sculpture feels charged to its maximum illusory potential, fluidly disappearing and rematerialising, simultaneously an object and its surrounding environment. For all their technical precision, there is no shortage of subtlety or sensuousness. In a city where glass abounds in the austere forms of high-rise hotels and apartment blocks, these works remind us of the material’s ability to alter our sense of space and of ourselves.
Larry Bell, Untitled, 1970
Adding to the room’s optical acrobatics is a large wall piece, Moving Ways (1978), one of Bell’s vapour works made using a modified version of the vacuum coating process to apply aluminium to black paper. Seen through, or reflected by, his sculptures, the works envelop one another, pooling their powers of illusion to create fleeting moments of perfect harmony.
Outside, in the Jardins des Boulingrins that lie adjacent to the gallery, a more recent and highly coloured glass work, The Blue Gate (2021), offers a more complex structural counterpoint to the Standing Walls. Installed on a lawn that forbids viewers to walk on it and approach the sculpture, its surfaces are robbed of their full visual potency and it feels oddly dormant. This work, together with the exhibition as a whole, reminds us that while these sculptures may have been created in a vacuum, they are only truly alive in close proximity to people.
‘Larry Bell: Works from the 1970s’ is at Hauser & Wirth, Monaco, until 31 August 2024
Wallpaper* Newsletter
Receive our daily digest of inspiration, escapism and design stories from around the world direct to your inbox.
Larry Bell, Moving Ways, 1978
-
Morgan announces nine limited editions of its Super 3 three-wheeler
The Super 3 Origins Collection assembles nine elaborate design specifications for the diminutive Morgan Super 3, drawing on the influences and inspirations that shaped this high-performance three-wheeler
By Jonathan Bell Published
-
Vipp’s new guesthouse in Latvia’s Salaca National Park is its cosiest to date
Danish design brand Vipp transforms a 19th-century Latvian riverside log cabin into its ninth guesthouse
By Sofia de la Cruz Published
-
Step inside Le Harlequin, an imaginative redesign of a Mumbai apartment
Le Harlequin by Design Hex is an imaginative redesign of a Mumbai apartment in the bustling Indian city's Lower Parel neighbourhood
By Daven Wu Published
-
Los Angeles art exhibitions: the best shows to see in August
Read our pick of the best Los Angeles art exhibitions to see this month, from Gordon Parks at Pace Gallery to Intuit Dome's new public art collection
By Carole Dixon Last updated
-
Nicole Eisenman explores the dimensions of sculpture and painting at Hauser & Wirth Paris
Nicole Eisenman presents ‘with, and, of, on Sculpture’, her first retrospective at Hauser & Wirth Paris drawing inspiration from political challengers to ABBA
By Tianna Williams Published
-
The Roth Bar at Hauser & Wirth Somerset serves up a cocktail of salvaged materials
Art and entertaining meet in Oddur Roth’s bar sculpture at Hauser & Wirth Somerset, a site-specific installation and social hub
By Hannah Silver Published
-
Who is the future of British art? Hauser & Wirth Somerset finds out
‘Present Tense’ at Hauser & Wirth Somerset showcases some of Britain’s most exciting emerging talents with a group show of 23 artists
By Mary Cleary Published
-
Avery Singer considers 9/11 trauma and corporate anonymity at Hauser & Wirth
‘Avery Singer: Free Fall’ opens at Hauser & Wirth, London, melding a serene office aesthetic with moments of horror
By Emily Steer Published
-
Frieze London 2023: what to see and do
Everything you want to see at Frieze London 2023 and around the city in our frequently updated guide
By Hannah Silver Last updated
-
Hospital Rooms and Hauser & Wirth unite for a sensorial London exhibition and auction
Hospital Rooms and Hauser & Wirth are working together to raise money for arts and mental health charities
By Hannah Silver Published
-
Cindy Sherman’s freaky new portrait collages dissect the divided self
We preview Cindy Sherman’s new portraits, on view at Hauser & Wirth Zurich during Zurich Art Weekend – which will see digitally manipulated collages explore the many facets of society
By Harriet Lloyd-Smith Published