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Environmental Art Or The Land Art Movement

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Title: Environmental Art Or The Land Art Movement


1
Environmental Art OrThe Land Art Movement
  • Sara Breakfield
  • Yoriko Jin

2
What is "Environmental Art"?
  • It is artwork created by artists concerned
    with the state of our environment worldwide, and
    with their local situation.
  • Environmental artists often work in these
    ways
  • They interpret nature, creating artworks to
    inform us about nature and its processes, or
    about environmental problems we face
  • They interact with environmental forces, creating
    artworks affected or powered by wind, water,
    lightning, even earthquakes
  • They re-envision our relationship to nature,
    proposing through their work new ways for us to
    co-exist with our environment
  • They reclaim and remediate damaged environments,
    restoring nature in artistic and often aesthetic
    ways

3
Diana Lynn Thompson
  • Diana Lynn Thompson's thoughtful and visually
    stunning artworks bridge the gap between "art in
    nature" installations and community-based
    conceptual art. Whether meticulously numbering or
    adding people's names to thousands of leaves, or
    distributing engraved seashells to 140 people
    from around the world as gifts to the sea (and
    carefully documenting the process), Thompson
    links ordinary people to the nature of her native
    Canada. She believes "the process is the
    teacher.
  • "Hundreds and Thousands" was a year-long project
    where Thompson numbered every leaf on five trees
    as well as wrote poetry on additional leaves in a
    park in Surrey, British Columbia. As the leaves
    fell, Thompson washed and flattened, and then
    pinned all 38,000 of them, with the help of
    visitors, to the Surrey Art Gallery's walls.
    Leaves inscribed with poetry were left for
    visitors to chance upon them in the park.

4
Hundreds and Thousands
5
James Turrell
  • James Turrell is an internationally acclaimed
    light and space artist whose work can be found in
    collections worldwide. Since childhood, Turrell
    has been fascinated with the qualities of light
  • A James Turrell skyspace is a freestanding
    enclosed chamber large enough for about 15 people
    and designed and constructed with utmost
    precision to heighten our sense of sight and
    perception.
  • Inside the skyspace, visitors sit on a bench and
    view the sky and atmospheric changes through an
    opening in the roof. On rainy days a moveable
    dome covers the opening and a secondary light
    source creates a seemingly infinite visual space
    beyond the roof aperture.
  • Turrell's work is meant to be taken in slowly,
    quietly, and over time. The Skyspace experience
    varies at different times of the year and
    different times of day. Visitors are encouraged
    to stop in again and again to sit back and absorb
    the effects of the Skyspace over the course of
    the seasons.
  • Visitors are also encouraged to swing by the
    Henry Art Gallery after dark to see the spectrum
    of intense colors that the exterior of the
    Skyspace emits when lit by thousands of computer
    controlled LED lights embedded in its glass
    panels.

6
Skyspace
7
Andy Goldsworthy
  • (British artist born in 1956 living in Scotland)
  • Works directly with nature, produces site
    specific sculpture and land works situated in
    natural settings. He uses materials in nature
    such as leaves, twigs, flower petals, pinecones,
    sand, snow and stone. His works are fragile and
    ephemeral because he has an idea that an artwork
    too has a natural life that eventually must end
    like the growth and the decay in nature.

8
Andy Goldsworthy
9
Andy Goldsworthy
10
Andy Goldsworthy
11
Christo Jeanne-Claude
  • An "artistic" duo known best for wrapping objects
    and buildings, as well as other types of
    enivironmental art.
  • Although their artwork is visually striking and
    often controversial due to its size and scale,
    the artists have repeatedly denied that their
    projects contain any deeper meaning. The purpose
    of their art is intended to simply make the world
    a "more beautiful place" or offer a new way of
    looking at an old landscape.
  • David Bourdon has called Christo's wrappings a
    "revelation through concealing."
  • The couple are partners in all undertakings.

12
Tree Wrappings
13
Island Wrapping
14
Valley Curtain
15
Umbrellas
16
Kathryn Miller
  • "Environmental art, by its very nature, moves
    beyond the confines of the gallery and is often
    motivated by an impulse to integrate artistic
    practice more fully into daily life.  Southern
    California artist Kathryn Miler's Seed Bombs
    project (1992-1994) makes physical this
    transition.
  • Miller designed portable "seed bombs" which could
    be used for landscape re-vegetation.  Made of
    rich soil and the seeds of native California
    plants compacted into egg like balls.  But Miller
    wanted viewers to take the seed bombs and throw
    them somewhere that was in need of planting by
    building construction, or otherwise degraded
    zones.  She wanted to see native plants flourish
    again in these areas.  Miller seeks to engage in
    a social action by using her artwork, and links
    the rarefied environment of the gallery space
    with nature at large

17
Seed Bombs
18
Seed Bombs Growing
19
Chris Drury
  • He is interested in the relationship between
    nature and culture. He travels around the world
    and works extensively with small communities in
    Europe, Japan and America. He makes work that
    fits with the needs of the community and is an
    integral part of the landscape.
  • A defining characteristic of all his works is
    that they draw attention to something which is
    outside of the work itself, they are not
    self-referential.

20
Body as a Landscape project
  • This is a project that looks at Body as Landscape
    or systems within the body and systems on the
    planet. He works with hospitals and medical
    technology for this project. He has looked at
    blood and water flows wave patterns from
    echocardiograms as well as the formation in rock,
    tree barks and landscapes.

21
Heart of Reeds
  • Taking the cross section of the human heart as
    its inspiration, he has been creating a reed bed
    which is located the former railway sidings. This
    reed bed is designed as an area of water, reeds,
    island and earth mounds which people can access
    via board walks.

22
Walter De Maria
  • The Lightning Field, 1977, by the American
    sculptor Walter De Maria, is recognized
    internationally as one of the late-twentieth
    century's most significant works of art.
    Commissioned and maintained for public viewing by
    Dia Art Foundation, The Lightning Field
    exemplifies Dia's commitment to the support of
    art projects whose nature and scale exceed the
    limits normally available within the traditional
    museum or gallery. Dia also maintains two other
    of De Maria's projects, both located in New York
    City The Broken Kilometer, 1979, and The New
    York Earth Room, 1977.
  • A work of Land Art situated in a remote area of
    the high desert of southwestern New Mexico, The
    Lightning Field is comprised of 400 polished
    stainless steel poles installed in a grid array
    measuring one mile by one kilometer. The poles,
    two inches in diameter and averaging 20 feet by 7
    1/2 inches in height, are spaced 220 feet apart.
    Since it is intended that visitors experience The
    Lightning Field alone or with a small group of
    people over an extended period of time, Dia
    provides simple accommodations for up to six
    people for overnight visits during the months of
    May through October.

23
Lightning Field
24
Earth Room
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