LAND MARKS Exhibition Runs at the Met Museum Through Aug 18

By: May. 11, 2013
Enter Your Email to Unlock This Article

Plus, get the best of BroadwayWorld delivered to your inbox, and unlimited access to our editorial content across the globe.




Existing user? Just click login.

Land Marks, an exhibition featuring earthworks artists, is now on View at the Metropolitan Museum through August 18, 2013 in the Lila Acheson Wallace Wing, first floor, Gallery 399.

Land Marks, an exhibition of 19 works from the collection of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, surveys the ways in which artists have made marks on the earth, or created images from marks made by humans on it. In the late 1960s, with the emergence of Land Art, artists began making works that were bound inextricably to their sites. These "Earthworks" artists worked on location and used the earth itself as canvas or sculptural material; they created outdoor gestures in what were often far-flung corners of the world and were, in sweep, both anti-monumental and epic. Because their art evaded the traditional progression from cloistered studios to rarifiEd Galleries and museums, these artists were often dependent on photography and mass media to communicate the very existence of their work.

The dissolution of boundaries-between object and context, and among different media-was a hallmark of the countercultural ethos in art at the time in which many of the artists featured in the exhibition were working. This went hand in hand with the dawning ecological movement, which maintained that our future existence is directly dependent on how we use and interact with our natural environment in the present. While the Earthworks artists traced, imprinted, and gauged the terrain to suggest vast sweeps of time at the edges of human history and beyond, photographers of a more traditional bent studied traces of past activity for previous cycles of expansion, exploitation, and exhaustion of the environment. Their shared concern suggests that art may provide the best vantage point from which to comprehend fully the inextricably bound destinies of the planet and ourselves.

Highlights of the exhibition include RoBert Smithson's Bingham Copper Mining Pit-Utah / Reclamation Project (1973), one of several unexecuted land-reclamation projects he proposed in the two years before his untimely death in a plane crash at age 35; two Anselm Kiefer watercolors shown with his still-controversial photo essay "Occupations 1969" as it appeared in a 1975 issue of the German art magazine Interfunktionen; Christo's Running Fence, Project for Sonoma County and Marin County, State of California (1975); and an important new acquisition, Michelle Stuart's polyptych of frottage drawings, Scanning Sequence (1969-1970). Works by Huma Bhabha, Matthew Brandt, Richard Long, Ana Mendieta, Vik Muniz, Dennis Oppenheim, and Mark Ruwedel are also featured in the exhibition.

Land Marks is organized by Doug Eklund, Associate Curator in the Department of Photographs, and Anne Strauss, Associate Curator in the Department of Modern and Contemporary Art, at The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

The Metropolitan Museum's website will feature the exhibition (www.metmuseum.org). Express admission may be purchased in advance at www.metmuseum.org/visit. For more information, call (212) 535-7710 or go online.


Play Broadway Games

The Broadway Match-UpTest and expand your Broadway knowledge with our new game - The Broadway Match-Up! How well do you know your Broadway casting trivia? The Broadway ScramblePlay the Daily Game, explore current shows, and delve into past decades like the 2000s, 80s, and the Golden Age. Challenge your friends and see where you rank!
Tony Awards TriviaHow well do you know your Tony Awards history? Take our never-ending quiz of nominations and winner history and challenge your friends. Broadway World GameCan you beat your friends? Play today’s daily Broadway word game, featuring a new theatrically inspired word or phrase every day!

 



Videos