art, dome, house, spiral technology, ecotheatre, Shukhov, Fuller, Foster, land-art, public-art, HABITAT, O2 Sustainability Treehouse, Geodesic tree house, Dustin Fieder, glowing treehouse, eco-friendly treehouse, green treehouse, sustainable treehouse, UNESCO

воскресенье, 14 сентября 2008 г.

LAND ART

http://forecastpublicart.org/LAND ART

land and land in art, an interview about the sculptor's views on land art

LAND ART a definition to be distilled from the views on land art of the sculptor

land art - land mark
questions

What is land art for you? I know that lot of different artists take part in this movement, what is land art for you as a sculpture?
Which artist you think to be the most important in land art movement? Why?
According to you, what is the difference between land art in past, today and future? What kind of future of land art do you expect?
What do you think, will land art sometimes become an art for professionals - I mean now days different kinds of artists take part in this movement, will it change? Will it be divided from other artists except land artists?
answers

1. What is land art for you? I know that lot of different artists take part in this movement, what is land art for you as a sculpture?
Land Art is not only a form of sculpture, for me it is sculpture. I like to do large land art projects because it uses the environment and changes it. Art in the landscape and art as landscape is public art. It reaches far more people than the usual works that hang or stand in living rooms or museums. Landscapes and urban open spaces belong to us all, and landscape projects are works of art that can be experienced by everyone, every day.
When land art incorporates living materials, like grasses and trees, they grow with the people and age with them. Land art can make use of the materials which are inherent to the landscape: rock and rocks, earth, sand and water. Also the weather can be a part of land art — think of Lighting Field by Walter De Maria, a land art project incorporating lightning by attracting it with stainless steel pointed rods.
Land art is as old as humanity, it's only recently that we call it art. Perhaps the same motives played a role in prehistoric times as they do in present day interventions in the landscape. Religion and art have a common goal necessitating an environment for ritual. Where religion needed to evoke the spiritual emotion, art bases its interpretation on intellectual, but also intuitive behavior. In the present time, art has been defined to such extent that it has been rationalized, analyzed and categorized.
Land art distinguishes itself from its surroundings as an artifact differs from a natural rock. Its surroundings are preferably a natural setting. Human interaction draws attention to a new perception of an environment. Sadly, most human dealings with nature disregard and destroy it.
Characteristic for land art is, in my opinion, the use of local materials and rearranging them in such a way that a new, contemplated situation results. Introducing foreign materials or objects would change the notion of land art. Pouring asphalt down a hill does not fit in this concept.
Land art in a city would lose its complementary function.

2. Which artist you think to be the most important in land art movement? Why?


contoured playground - courtesy Wikipedia

I think Isamu Noguchi is the first artist to make sculpture — using the land as a medium. The term land art was coined twenty years after he designed his Contoured Playground, in 1941. It was a forerunner of later works of art which were categorized as land art. In 1947 he made a proposal for a sculpture to be seen from Mars. Later he realized various projects using materials of the land.

Sculpture to be Seen from Mars

In 1947 Isamu Noguchi made a model, as a proposal, for a monumental earthwork to be visible from mars (to be viewed from Mars). From space it would be symbolic for a human face, but on earth it would have been a juxtaposition of plateau mound s (one with an elliptical crater), two cones and a pyramid, comparable to the ones in Egypt.


Roden Crater - courtesy Wikipedia

James Turell is creating one of the most important pieces of land art with his Roden Crater volcano project in Arizona, USA. This project not only incorporates the earth, but connects it to the solar system. When it is finished it will be the best examples of land art, as the land is land because everything above it is something else.

I think Noguchi’s to be viewed from Mars and Turell’s Roden Crater are the two greatest examples of land art — one (Turell) for being on earth and perceiving the light and space from our solar system — and the other (Noguchi) to be seen from the solar system, or rather, which could be seen from the solar system; knowing that, while you are actually within, or on, the project, gives a totally different mental perspective — the observation is in your mind.

3. According to you, what is the difference between land art in past, today and future? What kind of future of land art do you expect?
the past
Land art in the past can be interpreted in two parts:

1. the past, before the term ’land art’ was coined
2. and the past, right after this form of art was recognized and named ’land art’

Like the term ’land art’ was invented forty years ago, the term ’art’ itself came into existence long after mankind had been expressing themselves with representative and non-representative products. Putting objects into museums and forming collections strengthened the definition of art as we have seen it for a few hundred years. Prehistoric cave drawings and paintings may not have been made with the intention, or hope, of having it included in art history (let alone having it collected by a museum — a very impractical thing as far as cave drawings are concerned). Even though they probably were made with another goal in mind, they are expressions of the human mind. As were the observatory in Jaipur, India or Stonehenge in England. These are works of land art avant la lettre.
In the past, making these enormous landmarks must have given the makers the same satisfaction as it gives nowadays to artists making their projects in the landscape. This is why, I think, most ’land artists’ (my term) are inspired by these pre-historical artifacts.
I think that the difference between the pre-land art period and the land art period, in which we are now, there is not very much visual difference. The visual function is more or less the same — the feeling of encountering a prehistoric monumental work or a contemporary land art one, has a similar effect of astonishment or wonder. The making of either one gives the same level of satisfaction. Only the motives differ; or do they? Are religion and worship so much different from the wish to do something impressive or inspiring? Sam Rodia, who built the Watts Towers in Los Angeles said, when he was asked why, ’I wanted to do something big and I did it.’
The early art works titled land art mostly used natural materials like rocks, soil and water — often being rearranged by the artist. This is why this art form was also referred to as earth art or earth works. Now we use and introduce other materials also.
One great difference is the techniques of making such large projects. Were in the early ages these works were made by hand and with handmade tools, nowadays we have industrial tools and techniques which are available to us — excavating machines, bulldozers and cranes. Like the constructivists of revolutionary Russia were eager to use the techniques which had been developed — mass production, machines and other industrial possibilities — the artists, who were the first to propose and make monumental projects in the landscape, also availed themselves of modern techniques.
today
As the definition of land art evolves, the interpretations begin to become wider. It is a personal choice whether we want to hold on to the forms of land art as they were in the sixties and seventies of the twentieth century — or whether we are willing to keep an open mind and not limit ourselves to what we already know. The term environmental art came in the very late sixties (I myself used it for my work in 1969, calling my work environmental sculpture). In that time I actually meant the term to cover the same kind of work that Isamu Noguchi was doing. I don’t think the term land art had then yet been thought of — the term ’earth art’ was. But the interpretation of ’environmental art’ has evolved and now has been adopted to cover too many subjects, from ecological awareness to biodegradable art.
the future
What the future will bring, anybody’s guess is as good as the other’s. A factor which I haven’t covered yet is the influence of the art historians who are trying to move art in the direction they would like it to go. The emphasis nowadays is on meaningful , literary, art. And it has to be presentable in their museums. The documentation exhibitions on all forms of art in the environment have become surrogate art; because the museums cannot show the real thing. The experience of being at Lightning Field by Walter De Maria can never be replicated in a museum. The experience of walking between Donald Judd’s concrete constructions, ’fifteen untitled works in concrete, in the Marfa, Texas desert can never compare to a documentary about this work in a museum. Are these ’minimal art’, a term rejected by Judd, or are they land art? I don’t think he would care. Most categories are invented by art historians anyway — or accidentally by critics (for instance the term ’impressionists’).
4. What do you think, will land art sometimes become an art for professionals - I mean, nowadays different kinds of artists take part in this movement, will it change? Will it be divided from other artists except land artists?
I think that artists do not really want to fit into a so called movement. Of course we feel we have affinity with other the work artists. Every work of art should be unique — so, in this sense, it won’t fit into any category or movement devised by art historians. As many artists want to be recognized, they will participate in exhibitions and manifestations which have been given a name. This can’t hurt since we are free. But once you have a stamp it is sometimes very difficult to take this away: think of Donald Judd, who is called a minimal artist in every other text about him.
There will always be room for every art form, because it is the artist who determines the uniqueness of his work.

also: an interview about land art with Topos
definitions

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