"Miami Beach and Wynwood Arts District to Get New Infusion of Funds for Creative Placemaking, Thanks to ArtPlace Grant" - Notes from the Bass Museum - George Lindemann Jr

Susan Philipsz | By My Side, 2009 | Two-channel sound installation 3 min, 5 sec, played every 5 minutes
Courtesy of the artist and Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, New York

Miami, FLA (June 12, 2012) - Public art, safer streets, new gallery and studio space for artists are coming soon to the City of Miami Beach and Miami’s burgeoning Wynwood Arts District, thanks to a substantial grant from ArtPlace announced today.
 
“The Miami projects receiving ArtPlace funding exemplify the best in creative placemaking,” explained ArtPlace’s Carol Coletta. “They demonstrate a deep understanding of how smart investments in art, design and culture as part of a larger portfolio of revitalization strategies can change the trajectory of communities and increase economic opportunities for people.”
 
One notable ArtPlace grant goes to the Bass Museum of Art in Miami Beach for “TC: Temporary Contemporary,” a public art projects program that will bring recognized contemporary artists to create temporary, site-specific artist projects within the City Center/Arts District, a roughly 40-block district located within the South Beach area of Miami Beach.
 
The program is intended to activate the urban landscape with art, surprising and engaging residents, visitors and passers-by with outdoor works of art in unexpected places. Sculpture, murals, sound installations, video and other interactive works of art, will interrupt people’s daily routines and encourage thoughtful interactions with the city and its communities. Public art becomes a catalyst to appreciate the unique character of Miami Beach.
 
The Wynwood Arts District is a once desolate neighborhood of roughly 96 city blocks located just north of downtown Miami that has been undergoing unprecedented transformation through the visual arts over the past decade. Owing to the recent, global economic downturn and the sheer size of the arts district, Wynwood has seen increases in crime even as the district attracts more visitors. The Wynwood Arts District Association (WADA) sees the creation of a BID as key in improving the walkability and safety of the neighborhood and establishing the Wynwood district as the epicenter of the arts and creative businesses in Greater Miami.
 
WADA will receive a $140,000 grant from ArtPlace, a new national collaboration of 11 major national and regional foundations, six of the nation’s largest banks, and eight federal agencies, including the National Endowment for the Arts, to accelerate creative placemaking across the U.S. To date, ArtPlace has raised almost $50 million to work alongside federal and local governments to transform communities with strategic investments in the arts.
 
“Across the country, cities and towns are using the arts to help shape their social, physical, and economic characters,” said NEA Chairman Rocco Landesman. “The arts are a part of everyday life, and I am thrilled to see yet another example of an arts organization working with city, state, and federal offices to help strengthen and revitalize their communities through the arts. It is wonderful that ArtPlace and its funders have recognized this work and invested in it so generously.”
 
ArtPlace is making another investment in the Wynwood Arts District in the form of a $385,000 grant to The Light Box at Goldman Warehouse. Funding will support the activation and stabilization of the multidisciplinary cultural center, which supporters call a true home for artists in the community. This 12,000 square foot space includes a shared workspace, a flexible 150-seat theater, an ample rehearsal room, galleries and shared meeting space.
 
ArtPlace received almost 2200 letters of inquiry from organizations seeking a portion of the $15.4 million available for grants in this cycle. Inquiries came from 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, American Samoa, U.S. Virgin Islands.
 
In September, ArtPlace will release a new set of metrics to measure changes over time in the people, activity and real estate value in the communities where ArtPlace has invested with its grants.
 
Participating foundations include Bloomberg Philanthropies, The Ford Foundation, The James Irvine Foundation, The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, The Kresge Foundation, The McKnight Foundation, The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, The Rockefeller Foundation, Rasmuson Foundation, The Robina Foundation and an anonymous donor. In addition to the NEA, federal partners are the departments of Housing and Urban Development, Health and Human Services, Agriculture, Education and Transportation, along with leadership from the White House Office of Management and Budget and the Domestic Policy Council. ArtPlace is also supported by a $12 million loan fund capitalized by six major financial institutions and managed by the Nonprofit Finance Fund. Participating institutions are Bank of America, Citi, Deutsche Bank, Chase, MetLife and Morgan Stanley.
 
A complete list of this year’s ArtPlace awards can be found at artplaceamerica.org
 
About the Bass Museum of Art
Located in Miami Beach, the Bass Museum of Art offers a dynamic year-round calendar of exhibitions exploring the connections between contemporary art and works of art from its permanent collection of Renaissance and Baroque paintings, sculpture, textiles, Apulian Vessel Gallery and Egyptian Gallery. Artists’ projects, educational programs, lectures, concerts and free family days complement the works on view. Additionally, the museum opened the Lindemann Family Creativity Center in January 2012. The center is the home of the museum’s IDEA@thebass program of art classes and workshops. The museum was founded in 1963 when the City of Miami Beach accepted a collection of Renaissance and Baroque works of art from collectors John and Johanna Bass, the collection was housed in an Art Deco building designed in 1930 by Russell Pancoast. Architect Arata Isozaki designed an addition to the museum between 1998 and 2002 that doubled its size from 15,000 to 35,000 square feet. Most recently, the museum selected internationally acclaimed Oppenheim Architecture + Design to lead its first phase of design and renovation tied to the 2010 completion of Miami Beach’s Collins Park. Oppenheim redesigned and relocated the museum’s arrival area to flow from and into the new park on Collins Avenue. For more information, please visit www.bassmuseum.org.
 
The Bass Museum of Art is generously funded by the City of Miami Beach, Cultural Affairs Program, Cultural Arts Council; Miami-Dade County Department of Cultural Affairs and the Cultural Affairs Council, the Miami-Dade County Mayor and Board of County Commissioners; John S. and James L. Knight Foundation; and sponsored in part by the State of Florida, Department of State, Division of Cultural Affairs and the Florida Council on Arts and Culture and the Bass Museum of Art membership.
 

Hedge Funder Cohen, Eye Rothko, $25 Million Richter Sells

A Gerhard Richter painting with a price of between $20 million and $25 million led sales at the world’s biggest fair of modern and contemporary art where U.S. billionaires Steven Cohen and Jerry Speyer were among the VIP visitors.

The New York-based collector Alberto Mugrabi and U.K. artist Tracey Emin joined other well-known faces at the UBS- sponsored Art Basel in Switzerland, now in its 43rd edition, with 300 galleries from 36 countries.

"Untitled"

"Untitled"

Marlborough Fine Art via Bloomberg

"Untitled," a 1954 painting by Mark Rothko. The Abstract Expressionist work is being offered by Marlborough Fine Art at the 43rd edition of Art Basel in Switzerland. The fair runs though June 17.

"Untitled"

"Untitled"

Galerie Bruno Bischofberger via Bloomberg

"Untitled," a 1985 work by Jean-Michel Basquiat. It is being offered by the Zurich-based dealership Galerie Bruno Bischofberger at the Art Basel fair in Switzerland. The event runs through June 17.

"Untitled (Self-portrait)"

"Untitled (Self-portrait)"

Skarstedt Gallery via Bloomberg

"Untitled (Self-portrait)," a 1984 work by the German painter Albert Oehlen. It was sold by the New York-based Skarstedt Gallery at the Art Basel fair in Switzerland, which runs though June 17.

 

"A.B. Courbet" by Gerhard Richter

"A.B. Courbet" by Gerhard Richter

Pace Gallery via Bloomberg.

"A.B. Courbet," a 1986 abstract by Gerhard Richter. The work was sold by the New York-based Pace Gallery at the Art Basel fair in Switzerland, previewing on June 12-13. The work was priced between $20 million and $25 million.

Twombly blackboard painting

Twombly blackboard painting

Galerie Karsten Greve AG St. Moritz via Bloomberg.

"Hill (Rome)," a 1966 painting by Cy Twombly is being offered for sale by the St. Moritz-based dealers Galerie Karsten Greve at the 43rd edition of the Art Basel fair in Switzerland. The event previews on June 12-13.

 

"Sumac" by Alexander Calder

"Sumac" by Alexander Calder

Pace Gallery via Bloomberg.

"Sumac" by Alexander Calder, a mobile work made in 1961. The sheet metal, wire, and paint work is being offered by the New York-based Pace Gallery at the Art Basel fair in Switzerland, previewing on June 12-13.

 

"Travel Picture Rose"

"Travel Picture Rose"

Thomas Dane Gallery via Bloomberg

"Travel Picture Rose," a 2007-2008 diptych by the Los Angeles-based photographer Walead Beshty. The work is being offered by the London-based dealer Thomas Dane at Art Basel.

 

"Untitled" by Houseago

"Untitled" by Houseago

Fredrik Nilsen/ Thomas Houseago and Hauser & Wirth via Bloomberg

"Untitled," a 2012 bronze by Thomas Houseago. The sculpture is being shown by Hauser & Wirth at the Art Basel fair in Switzerland. The 43rd edition of the event previews on June 12-13.

 

"Egyptian Light"

"Egyptian Light"

Tony Shafrazi Gallery, New York, via Bloomberg.

"Egyptian Light," a 2011-2012 "tablet" by the New York-based dealer Tony Shafrazi. It is among 9 such works being shown by the gallerist at the Art Basel fair in Switzerland, which runs through June 17.

"Tears"

"Tears"

Spruth Magers Berlin London via Bloomberg

"Tears," a 2012 digital print on vinyl by Barbara Kruger. The work is being shown by the Berlin and London gallery Spruth Magers at the 43rd edition of the Art Basel fair, which previews on June 12-13.

Richter’s monumental 1986 red, blue and yellow abstract “A.B. Courbet” was sold by Pace Gallery of New York on behalf of an unidentified collector. The dealership’s staff members confirmed the transaction today, saying the buyer was a U.S. based collector, though they wouldn’t say if the work had sold within the asking range.

The German artist is on a bull run at auctions, with a record $21.8 million paid at Christie’s International on May 8 for the 1993 painting “Abstraktes Bild (798-3).” Richter’s average auction price in 2012 is $3.1 million, compared to $290,112 in 2009, according to the Artnet database.

A 1954 Mark Rothko abstract from a Swiss collection, featuring a block of orange above a band of pale pink, remained unsold by the second afternoon, priced at $78 million via London-based Marlborough Fine Art.

Auction Records

Like Richter, it was testing confidence at the top end of the market with prices that reflected auction records for the artists achieved in May. The price is pitched just below the record $86.9 million achieved for a 1961 abstract at Christie’s in New York, also on May 8.

“Negotiations are still cooking,” Marlborough’s director Gilbert Lloyd said in an interview. South American and Russian clients were interested in the work, he said. Frank Auerbach’s 1985 painting “Head of J.Y.M.,” priced at 550,000 pounds ($857,200), featured among the gallery’s first-day sales.

“It’s quite classical and safe this year,” the Brussels- based art adviser Henry Bounameaux said in an interview. “I’m seeing a lot of familiar names. It must reflect what is going on in the economy. No one knows what is going to happen, and yet the art market still goes on.”

The diamond dust-encrusted 1981 Andy Warhol painting “Joseph Beuys” was among the first day’s sales. This had been marked at about $10 million on the booth of the New York dealer Acquavella. It was also purchased by a U.S.-based collector.

Hirst Sculpture

Damien Hirst’s 2006 sculpture “Stripper,” a vitrine containing hundreds of surgical instruments, was also available, priced at 3.75 million pounds on the booth of White Cube. The London-based dealership had sold several other works, including Mark Bradford’s 2012 mixed-media painting, “Witch in a Bottle,” for $550,000.

Art Basel remains the must-visit fair for curators, advisers and collectors in an increasingly crowded calendar. This year, the preview was extended to two days to meet growing demand from both established collectors and new buyers looking to art as an alternative to turbulent financial markets.

Cohen, founder of the hedge fund SAC Capital Advisors LP, and Speyer, chief executive of the property developers Tishman Speyer, were among the select “First Choice” invitees who arrived in pouring rain for privileged access to the fair before the main crowd of VIPs was admitted at 3 p.m yesterday.

Gagosian’s Picasso

Cohen, wearing a baseball cap with the logo “NERO,” was spotted shaking hands with the dealer Larry Gagosian on a booth packed with museum-quality works by established artists such as Warhol, Hirst, Pablo Picasso and Robert Rauschenberg. This year, Gagosian brought an estimated $250 million of works to a fair that has inventory valued at about $2 billion.

Though the preview was dominated by art-fair regulars, several dealers reported selling to new clients.

“I sold works priced at more than $1 million to a Scandinavian and an Israeli buyer I hadn’t met before,” said the Swiss dealer Karsten Greve, who has the 1966 Cy Twombly blackboard painting “Hill (Rome),” tagged on his booth at more than $12 million.

New York-based Skarstedt Gallery was one of several dealerships to be enthusiastic about the new tiered two-day preview at Art Basel.

“It’s good to be able to talk to important collectors without being interrupted,” said Per Skarstedt, gallery director, who sold a 1984 Albert Oehlen self-portrait for between $1.5 million and $2 million. The 1987 Rosemarie Trockel knitted painting “Made in Western Germany” sold for $1 million.

Hufkens’s Bourgeois

A lyrical Louise Bourgeois 2010 mixed media work on paper, “A Baudelaire (#9) The Impossible,” was sold by Brussels-based dealer Xavier Hufkens to a European collector. It had an asking price of $1.4 million.

The dealer, in common with most exhibitors interviewed by Bloomberg News, described levels of business as about the same as last year. He was also another of a majority of exhibitors who expressed enthusiasm for the two-day preview.

“You can spend much more time with collectors and actually talk about art, yet they still feel the pressure to buy,” Hufkens said. “It wasn’t good when people were pushing each other aside to get into the fair.”

Other exhibitors, who declined to be named, were unhappy about having to class valued clients as either “First Choice” or ordinary VIPs. Some had been reluctant to hand over client lists to Art Basel, which had issued the VIP invitations, rather than the galleries themselves.

Todd Levin

“It feels more blue-chip and thoughtful this year,” the New York-based adviser Todd Levin said in an interview. “The market used to be shaped like a bell-curve. Now there are just two spikes. One for the top artists, and the other for younger names. It’s difficult for the stuff in between.”

The U.S. artist Rudolf Stingel was one of the blue-chip names in demand. His “Untitled (Paula),” based on an old black and white photograph of the New York gallerist Paula Cooper smoking a cigarette, was sold by Cooper to a European private institution for about $3 million in the Art Unlimited sector.

Hauser & Wirth sold the 1978 Philip Guston canvas “Orders” for $6 million and the 1993 Bourgeois mixed media sculpture “Arched Figure” for $2 million. Both were bought by European collectors.

The New York dealer Tony Shafrazi was also breaking new ground by giving over his booth to a one-man show of his own artworks. The brightly-colored “tablets,” combining photographic images with text, are priced at $50,000 to $150,000, said gallery staff member John J. Czaplicki, who would not give details of confirmed sales.

Art Basel runs at the Messe Basel through June 17. The fair’s specialist offshoot Design Miami/Basel runs concurrently nearby, as do the satellite contemporary-art shows Liste, Volta and Scope at other venues in the Swiss city.

Art Basel has offshoots in Miami Beach (Dec. 6-9) and Hong Kong (May 23-26 2013),

Information: http://www.artbasel.com/go/id/ss/lang/eng/

"The Seductive Lure of Abstraction" in @wsj

By TERRY TEACHOUT
June 7, 2012, 5:52 p.m. ET

One of the most satisfying museum retrospectives ever devoted to an American artist is now traveling from coast to coast. "Richard Diebenkorn: The Ocean Park Series," which closed at California's Orange County Museum of Art two weeks ago and will reopen on June 30 at the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, consists of about 75 abstract paintings and works on paper made by Mr. Diebenkorn between 1967 and 1987, the years when he worked out of a studio in the Ocean Park neighborhood of Santa Monica, Calif. While the works in this series mostly conform to the same general pattern—they appear to suggest aerial views of the California landscape, seen through the fracturing prism of cubism—they are so richly and resourcefully varied that no two could be mistaken for one another.
SIGHTINGS
Colin Young-Wolff

Visitors take in 'Richard Diebenkorn: The Ocean Park Series' at the Orange County Museum of Art.

Part of what makes this series so fascinating is that Mr. Diebenkorn, who died in 1993, waged a lifelong "battle" with abstraction. He started out as a gifted Abstract Expressionist painter. In 1955 he suddenly embraced representation, turning out dozens of figurative paintings that translate the language of Matisse into a wholly personal, semiabstract style. Then, in the Ocean Park series, he made a decisive return to total abstraction, in the process creating the most original works of his career.

To chart Mr. Diebenkorn's stylistic development is to be reminded of the near-overwhelming power of the idea of abstraction in the 20th century. It was even felt by artists who, like Pierre Bonnard and Fairfield Porter, never produced an abstract painting in their lives, but were nonetheless influenced by the way in which practitioners of abstraction created what Mr. Diebenkorn called "invented landscapes," nonobjective images that evoked the world of tangible reality while steering clear of literal representation.

The idea of abstraction is so central to the history of modern art that it left its mark on the work of nonvisual artists as well. George Balanchine, for example, is best remembered for the many "plotless" ballets that he made to the music of Igor Stravinsky. The Russian-born choreographer never used the word "abstract" to describe them. "Dancer is not a color," he said. "Dancer is a person." But to look at a dance like "Stravinsky Violin Concerto," in which still-recognizable human relationships are stripped of all literal meaning, is to suspect that Balanchine saw in his youth at least some of the innovative canvases in which Vasily Kandinsky, his fellow countryman, dispensed with the pictorial restrictions of figurative art to become the first abstract painter.

Just as Kandinsky turned his back on figuration, so did the atonal composers of the early 20th century, led by Arnold Schoenberg, abandon tonal harmony, the fundamental ordering principle on which all Western classical music had previously been based. In a tonal composition, harmonic movement is the "plot" that propels the listener through time. Schoenberg, by contrast, sought to express his inmost feelings in a raw, unmediated way instead of using large-scale tonal architecture to shape them into conventionally coherent structures. "One must express oneself!" he told Kandinsky in 1911. "Express oneself directly! Not one's taste, or one's upbringing, or one's intelligence, knowledge or skill. Not all these acquired characteristics, but that which is inborn, instinctive."

You can also see the mark of abstraction on a fair amount of 20th-century literature—and not just the avowedly experimental writings of James Joyce or Gertrude Stein, either. Countless modern writers have been influenced by Anton Chekhov's short stories and plays, which renounce plot-based structure, concentrating instead on the quasiabstract sketching of character and mood. This approach long ago became the basis for the vast majority of short stories published in the New Yorker. Somerset Maugham, a staunch traditionalist who believed in the iron necessity of plot, liked to tease younger writers who embraced the magazine's famously ambiguous house style: "Ah, yes, those wonderful New Yorker stories which always end when the hero goes away, but he doesn't really go away, does he?"

But Maugham's sly quip also reminds us that nonvisual "abstraction," for all its historical significance, has never become truly popular with mass audiences—and neither, for that matter, has visual abstraction. Though it has no shortage of devotees, most people are still more comfortable looking at paintings with a subject, just as they prefer novels and plays with complicated plots and four-movement symphonies with familiar harmonies, and my guess is that they probably always will.

Yet despite what seems to be an innate preference for more or less literal representation of the visible world, the abstract idea remains to this day both seductive and perennially relevant. Why? Because the best abstract art has the power to cut through the rigid conventions of direct representation and externalize interior essences—to show us things not as they look, but as they are. Balanchine may have understood this better than anybody. "We choreographers get our fingertips on that world everyone else is afraid of, where there are no words for things," he told Jerome Robbins. He knew that a wordless glance across a near-empty stage, or a splash of color in the right place on a canvas, can sometimes say more than…well, a thousand words.

—Mr. Teachout, the Journal's drama critic, writes "Sightings" every other Friday. He is the author of "Pops: A Life of Louis Armstrong." Write to him at tteachout@wsj.com.

"Sun Tunnels | Nancy Holt: Discovering Tunnels in the Sand" | By Ann Landi - WSJ.com

Lucin, Utah

The first key to understanding "Sun Tunnels," Nancy Holt's 1976 landmark of the Land Art movement, is to find her work from that heroic and grandiose period in American art. Recently, I joined two friends at the end of their tour of Land Art monuments—an itinerary that included Michael Heizer's "Double Negative," Walter De Maria's "Lightning Field" and Robert Smithson's "Spiral Jetty"—and we headed north from Salt Lake City, past the dreamy blue expanse of the Great Salt Lake and miles and miles of blindingly white salt flats. Then our rather primitive directions to "Sun Tunnels" took us east on a two-lane highway through scruffy desert terrain, distantly rimmed by pale violet mountains. The only serious sign of human habitation was the town of Montello, Nev., (population 193), where the ancient postmistress gave us vague directions to the ghost town of Lucin and the TL Bar Ranch. We never did find the ghost town, but spotted signs for the ranch and discovered a small sanctuary for migratory birds. Then, alternately squinting and peering through binoculars, I spied something that looked a bit like a pair of manmade semicircular humps in the distance.

We turned left onto a dirt road and after a mile or so along a route that looked not to have seen much traffic since covered-wagon days, we arrived at four massive concrete pipes that could pass for the construction site of some alien life form. We had arrived.

suntunnels1

Barbara Rachko

Nancy Holt's 'Sun Tunnels' (1976) sought to bring a human scale to the vast Utah desert.

Each of Ms. Holt's four tunnels is about 18 feet long and 9 feet in diameter, and as we scrambled inside, my first impulse was to pose as Vitruvian woman—arms and legs outstretched to approximate the Leonardo drawing—inside one of the apertures. The tunnels were raw-looking against the parched landscape and achingly beautiful sky, and our initial reaction was a shrug of the shoulders: "What's the big deal?" They're lined up in an open X-construction and, according to my background notes, each weighs 22 tons and rests on a buried concrete foundation; a rectangle drawn around the perimeter of the monument would measure about 68 feet by 53 feet, and the wall thickness of each tunnel is 7 inches.

So much for the dry facts. As we explored the interiors, magical things happened. The tunnels were about 20 degrees cooler inside than the midafternoon desert, and each has a different configuration of holes, from seven to 10 inches in diameter, corresponding to four different constellations—Draco, Perseus, Columba and Capricorn. The holes cast ellipses of light on the interiors, which change positions as the sun moves throughout the day (one wonders what the effect would be by moonlight). Each hole also acts like a kind of oculus—framing bits of the landscape—so that through one you might see a snatch of blue sky and scudding clouds; through another, a roundel of purplish mountains. (In intense heat, I had read in Ms. Holt's descriptions of the work, mirages can make these appear to be reflected upside down.) The larger openings at the ends also act like framing devices, so that from the interior you might have the illusion of standing inside a giant telescope. In all, the experience could prove both disorienting and intimate, affirming Ms. Holt's stated desire to "bring the vast space of the desert back to human scale."

Ms. Holt, now 74, is one of a group of artists who, in the late 1960s and early '70s, brought outsize ambitions to carving up, embellishing and taming large expanses of Mother Nature, whether tunneling into an extinct volcano (James Turrell), orchestrating celestial extravaganzas out of lightning (Mr. De Maria), or building a phantasmic city in the desert (Mr. Heizer). She is the widow of Smithson, who died in a plane crash in 1973, and arguably the only woman to have achieved prominence in the Land Art movement. She began her career as a photographer and video artist, and has long been fascinated by constellations and nature's light (for example, a work called "Dark Star Park" in a bleak stretch of Rosslyn, Va., just across the river from Washington, D.C., emerged from her musings about the deaths of stars, including our own sun).

I talked with Ms. Holt a few weeks after my "Sun Tunnels" visit to ask some questions about her monument, one of which was why she—born and raised on the East Coast—became so enamored of this particular site that she bought a 40-acre parcel in 1973. She has written about first visiting the desert in 1968, with Smithson and Mr. Heizer, and connecting with that kind of "Western spaciousness." When she found the terrain for "Sun Tunnels," she says, "I had the sense that I was perhaps walking on a piece of land that nobody had ever walked on before—the natives who lived there hundreds of years ago, I'm sure they didn't step on every piece of my 40 acres—and that was thrilling to me."

I also did not quite understand the positioning of the tunnels, and I'm still not sure Ms. Holt's explanation makes sense, but I throw it out there for the more astronomically sophisticated: The work, she says, "marks the yearly extreme positions of the sun. On the equinox, the sun sets and rises due east and due west, and then for the rest of the year, the sun is a little bit to the north or south." According to Ms. Holt, "Sun Tunnels" will yield a different experience according to the time of day. "If you get there at noon, you won't see any of the golden glow that comes through in some of my photographs, because that only happens when the sun is setting," she explains. "It's wonderful to sleep out there. Even with no moonlight, just under the stars, it's great."

And lastly, I wanted to know about some strange markings we found inside the tunnels—repeated striations, dark staccato lines. "No one's been able to give me a good explanation," she says, "but we think it may be guys shooting guns in such a way that the bullet spins around inside. You cannot keep a Western male from shooting a gun. It seems to be an impossibility." But she's rather pleased that the source of the markings remains unknown. "I kind of like the mystery."

And that's all of a piece with "Sun Tunnels" itself, which leaves one wondering what visitors hundreds of years hence will think of the work, as we wondered about the origins of the Pueblo ruins in Mesa Verde National Park a couple of days later.

But first they will have to find it.

Ms. Landi writes on culture and the arts.

 

 

"When You Need a Giant Canvas for Your Work" | By Arnie Cooper - WSJ.com

Ends of the Earth:Land Art to 1974
The Geffen Contemporary,
Museum of Contemporary Art
Through Sept. 3

Los Angeles

If you're a detail person, the first thing you'll notice about "Ends of the Earth: Land Art to 1974," at the Geffen Contemporary at the Museum of Contemporary Art, is the missing start date in the show's title. Senior curator Philipp Kaiser and co-curator Miwon Kwon insist the omission was intentional. Ms. Kwon, a professor of art history at the University of California, Los Angeles, says that "we chose not to put a beginning date into the title of the show, since Land Art emerges through many different strains of art practices and one could locate multiple moments of its 'beginning.'"

[LANDART]The Noguchi Museum, NY. /Soichi Sunami

Isamu Noguchi's proposed 'Memorial to Man,' aka 'Sculpture to Be Viewed From Mars' (1947). The nose alone was to be a mile long.

You might also wonder why what the accompanying catalog calls the "first large-scale museum exhibition on Land Art" includes work only through 1974. It's not as if the genre, in which the landscape is treated as a giant canvas and the resulting artworks are not only linked to it but express it, dissolved in the mid-1970s; the noted British Land artist Andy Goldsworthy was still in college at that time. But the curators wanted to feature projects created before the Hirshhorn Museum's exhibit "Probing the Earth: Contemporary Land Projects" established the category in 1978. "This show," Ms. Kwon says, "is about early experimentation."

The cutoff date was also an important milestone for the genre. In 1974, New York's Dia Art Foundation was established to support visionary large-scale projects. Consider Robert Smithson's mammoth "Spiral Jetty," constructed in 1970 from basalt rock and earth at the Great Salt Lake's northeastern shore and donated to the Dia by Smithson's estate in 1999. The 1,500-foot-long coil was covered by water soon after its construction but re-emerged after the millennium, allowing visitors to walk between the spirals.

This brings us to the oft-asked question—repeated in an essay written by Mr. Kaiser and Ms. Kwon for the exhibition catalog—"How can you bring monumental artworks that are continuous with the earth in remote locations such as the deserts of Nevada, Utah, or New Mexico into a gallery space?"

The very simple answer: You can't. "We don't even try," Ms. Kwon says, referring to another colossal work, Michael Heizer's 1969-70 "Double Negative," two 250-foot-deep, 30-foot-wide trenches cut into the eastern edge of the Mormon Mesa, northwest of Overton, Nev. Totaling 1,500 feet in length, this immense earthwork is visible by satellite. But you won't see even one image of it at this show. Ms. Kwon says, "We don't want to engage in the common effort made by museums to represent the work with documentary photographs." Her statement is ironic given that "Double Negative" is part of the MOCA collection, a fact that inspired Mr. Kaiser to propose "Ends of the Earth."

However, as Mr. Kaiser is quick to note, every project is different. "For example, 'Double Negative' is out there and we respect the fact that you have to drive to see it," the curator says. "But Robert Smithson took a different approach, establishing the system of the site and the nonsite." Mr. Kaiser is referring to the fact that Smithson conceived of three manifestations of his piece: not only the actual spiral in Utah but a 35-minute film and an essay, both included in the show.

Despite such distinctions, Land Art is frequently equated with larger-than-life endeavors constructed in the American Southwest. But, Ms. Kwon says, "it's not all about monumental, macho guys with bulldozers and dynamite in the desert." The show, which seeks to shatter many misconceptions about the genre, has re-created numerous smaller works: Helen Mayer and Newton Harrison's 5½-by-8-foot "Hog Pasture: Survival Piece #1" (1970-1971) contains live plants—munched on by an actual pig before the opening. And Alice Aycock's "Clay #2" (1971)—another re-creation—contains 16 4-foot squares of cracked clay, inspired by Ms. Aycock's visit to Death Valley in 1969.

Another misconception is that Land Art is antiurban. Robert Morris's "Earthwork" is a 2,000-pound pile of dirt made up of earth, brick, steel and industrial scraps from the New York area. The work originally appeared in 1968 at "Earthworks," the first group exhibition of the genre, which took place at Virginia Dwan's Gallery on 57th Street. The show also presents Swedish pop artist Claes Oldenburg's film "The Hole," depicting his 1967 performance piece "Placid Civil Monument," in protest of the Vietnam War. The 10-minute film shows gravediggers fashioning a 6-foot wide, 3-foot deep hole in Central Park behind the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Perhaps more significantly, "Ends of the Earth" aims to shatter the assumption that Land Art is chiefly an American enterprise. The show's 200 works spotlight more than 100 artists from 17 countries in South America, Europe, the Middle East, Asia and Australia as well as the U.S.

Consider the two international works visible immediately upon entering the gallery. Playing directly in front of you is the Swiss kinetic artist Jean Tinguely's 1962 antinuke film, "Study for an End of the World," a 22-minute piece shot in the desert outside of Las Vegas near an atomic-bomb site. The now grainy film, which appeared on the weekly television news program "David Brinkley's Journal," depicts choreographed explosions of junk found in scrap yards around Las Vegas.

To its left is French artist Yves Klein's "Región de Grenoble (RP10)," a 2-by-3-foot work simulating a relief map of the Earth utilizing his patented "International Klein Blue." It was "the artist's vision," Ms. Kwon says, "to claim a color that exceeds territorial boundaries and divisions." Back in 1957, Klein theorized that the entire planet was blue—an idea confirmed by the first human in space, Russian cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, who declared, "The Earth is blue. How wonderful. It is amazing." No surprise then that Mr. Kaiser says Klein had declared the entire planet a work of art.

Not that all of these projects could actually be realized. The exhibit includes Jean-Michel Sanejouand's proposal for a cultural park development on top of Mount Vesuvius, as well as the Italian architectural collective Superstudio's plan for a gridded superstructure to wrap around the globe. Mr. Klein wasn't kidding about the planet as artwork, a perspective that is evident in one of the show's most provocative pieces, Isamu Noguchi's 1947 proposal "Memorial to Man." The 15-by-34-foot photograph, which appears to be of a massive earthwork sculpture in the sand, contains a face whose nose was to be one mile long. Mr. Noguchi wanted the image to be visible from space "informing others that an intelligent life form once had existed on our planet."

Ms. Kwon says: "Although we do not assert an origin point for Land Art, Noguchi's works are the earliest in the show. 'Memorial to Man,' also known as 'Sculpture to Be Viewed from Mars,' presages many aspects of Land Art as it will develop in the 1960s—the scale of his vision; using land as material and means to articulate commentary on man's relation to earth and cosmos; the importance of the extra-human viewpoint; the coming together of the primitivistic and the futuristic. Utopic and dystopic at once."

Mr. Cooper is a freelance writer in Santa Barbara, Calif.