8/24/2023 0 Comments Spiral jetty by robert smithson![]() The work consists of a long strip of land, basalt rocks and salt crystals, which juts out over the Salt Lake. Like many other works of this type, it is the property of the DiA Foundation of New York, which takes care of its maintenance and organizes guided visits on the site. Spiral Jetty is one of the best known and most monumental works of Land Art. The most famous is undoubtedly the Spiral Jetty, a spiral pier made of stones, salt crystals and mud, which juts out into the waters of the Great Salt Lake, Utah. ![]() ![]() The few subsequent environmental interventions are almost entirely dominated by the shapes of the circle and spiral, the latter emblem of the entropic dispersion of energy, which according to Smithson was a key concept of contemporaneity, as well as of art. Robert Smithson, Asphalt, performance near Rome in 1969. The procedural implications of his environmental work are evident in Glue Pour (Rampa di glue, 1969), a barrel of glue overturned on a slope, in such a way that the glue, before solidifying, assumes an absolutely random shape: a gesture already proposed in larger scale around Rome two months earlier, when Smithson knocked a load of asphalt down a slope. Smithson uses this term to define the environmental interventions he carries out on an increasing scale from 1969 to the year of his death, which occurred in a plane crash while flying over the Amarillo Ramp site, his last earthwork, in the city of Amarillo in Texas. After the overcoming of Minimalism, in a procedural key, he arrived, in the late sixties, at the first earthworks. This art form was born as one of the many facets of ecological art, so called because the artist engages in an active confrontation with the surrounding space. Originally from New Jersey, he presents himself as a polyvalent artist: writer, director and sculptor in the open air, Smithson is the spokesperson and pioneer of Land Art. The work of Robert Smithson (1938-1973) is particularly significant in this regard. Robert Smithson, Amarillo Ramp, 1969, Texas In short, the artist does not create, but works on something pre-existing, in order to define a new relational space for the observer. A critique of consumerism and the commodification of art, to instead enhance the theme of recycling and the harmless exploitation of already existing resources. Behind the admiration for monumental sculptures and spectacular landscape views, however, there is also an ecological message. This movement is a challenge and there are many artists, especially Americans and Anglo-Saxons, who have been trying their hand at the encounter-clash with the natural environment since the 1970s. But it is their ephemeral nature that makes them fascinating. In Land Art, the works are children of Mother Earth and their existence is determined by the action of atmospheric agents, which can change or destroy them. This does not mean that this space cannot be the museum or the gallery, as demonstrated for example by Duchamp’s Etantdonnés, an environment created for a specific context (Philadelphia, Museum of Art), nor that the environmental work cannot find forms for be documented, told or ‘exhibited’ in the museum or gallery. What is crucial to understand is that, both in the enviroments and in the works of Land Art, the work ceases to be a closed object that can be exhibited in any place or circumstance, to become something that relates to a specific space and that often it cannot exist outside that space. This definition, used for the first time as the title of a film by the German curator and gallery owner Gerry Schum, which documented the works outdoors of some British and American artists, it may still have a functionality, as long as it allows to distinguish the different instances that push the artists to leave the studio and enter the desert, lakes and woods: instances that may have, from time to time, a minimalist, procedural, conceptual or performative connotation. If, on the other hand, art leaves these institutional spaces to confront itself with an urban or natural space, we will speak of Land Art. If it is art that takes on environmental connotations – that is, it becomes an environment that can be visited and accessible to the viewer – then we will speak of environment, that is, the environment as a whole understood as a work of art. This conquest can follow different paths. One of the main achievements that art puts in place at the end of the sixties is that of the environment. Christo and Jeanne Claude, Surrounded Islands, 1980-1983, Floride Before talking to you about this great artist, it is important to highlight the Land Art movement: an art form perfectly integrated with nature and subject to its transformations. Among the wonderful works of Land Art, Robert Smithson stands out with his work Spiral Jetty, the result of an ecological art and bearer of a message of recycling and safeguarding the natural environment.
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