Drop Test
The Gravity of Stillness: Art and Physics There is a fundamental, almost instinctive caution when confronting a massive, physical object. It is a feeling I experienced firsthand at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles, standing before one of Richard Serra’s iron wall-leaning studies. Stepping in line to view the piece, a viewer leapt backward, startled by the instinctive fear that the object might fall on her. It was a moment of visceral truth. Overwhelming mass gets respect. Serra’s work, like his “Berlin Block for Charlie Chaplin” (1977), forces us to confront the sheer physical reality of matter. He used forged iron not just for its powerful figurative connotations, but for its literal density and structural integrity—and the sculptor's power over matter—moving mountains, so to speak, with a flick of the wrist. This artistic confrontation with overwhelming mass mirrors a terrifying conflict in my own soul: the threat of an iron-rich meteor striking Earth. While Serra’s ...