Nastia Muntean Sets 1 10 1 15 -

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Thus, the “set” is both the collection of four subsets and the instruction to experience them sequentially. The numbers do not denote a total sum (1+10+1+15=27) but rather differences—the jump from 10 back to 1 creates a cognitive break, while 15 introduces an excess. Nastia Muntean Sets 1 10 1 15

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The Dawn of a New Standard: Nastia Muntean Sets 1:10–1:15 Benchmark If you are looking for this specific "piece"

2. Theoretical Framework: Seriality and Constraint

Muntean’s approach resonates with the legacy of serial art, as defined by Mel Bochner (1967): “The serial artist does not aim to produce a beautiful object, but to posit a system.” The sequence 1,10,1,15 can be read as a non-arithmetic progression—neither strictly ascending nor symmetric. Unlike Sol LeWitt’s Variations of Incomplete Open Cubes (1974), which exhausts combinatorial possibilities, Muntean’s set appears deliberately incomplete and asymmetrical. Identifying Nastia Muntean and her field of activity

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