Richard Erdman’s archive traces the evolution of his practice across decades, encompassing marble, stone, and bronze works. Early marble and stone sculpture explored the dialogue between material, form, and process, where geological time met the human hand. These foundational works established a vocabulary of balance, spatial tension, and structural awareness that continues to inform his contemporary sculptural language.

The archive demonstrates a recurring engagement with negative space, surface variation, and formal economy, revealing how his work evolves while maintaining continuity of material knowledge and conceptual rigor. Together, these works document a sustained inquiry into how material, scale, and form shape one another, offering insight into the progression of Erdman’s sculpture over time.