#In 1982 Agnes Denes cultivated
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aiiaiiiyo · 2 years ago
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liezon · 4 years ago
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TIME Research Journal
Artist #1
Agnes Denes
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http://www.agnesdenesstudio.com/works7-WFStatue.html
Wheat Field - A Confrontation: Battery Park Landfill, Downtown Manhattan, 1982
I selected this work as it relates to my theme of nature vs. technology/human innovation. This artist was able to cultivate a natural environment in a seemingly indomitable or “lost cause” area.
Form: Massive, living wheat field in the center of a NY landfill, filled with trash and rubble. It can be interacted with, walked through, and harvested. It is constructed entirely from organic material (likely wheat seeds.)
Content: I think the context of where this work is located is key to understanding its content. This field was planted about two blocks away from Wall Street, considered the hub of American economic growth and activity. Planting this field in a landfill in one of the world’s largest and busiest metropolis’, to me, represents a growing divide between the rushed hustle of the industrial innovations that support city growth, and the slowly tilled earth that, in turn, supports us. It is a clash of quick-paced advancement and slow, mindful work.
Process: Denes likely used traditional farming methods to till the earth in order to plant this field (though I’m guessing she may have used large equipment such as a tractor, so I don’t know how “traditional” that is.) She also likely had to have a lot of debris from the landfill moved out of the way. For two acres of land, she may have utilized outside help to physically form this work.
Artist #2
Mathilde Roussel
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http://www.raffard-roussel.com/fr/projets-lives-of-grass-v3/
Lives of Grass v3, 2010 - 2012
I feel inspired by this work in that Roussel has, essentially, carefully cultivated life in an inorganic form. While some of the materials themselves are organic (such as soil and wheat seeds), the sculpture itself is molded from recycled metal and fabric, and constructed into this human form. The statement describes a sort of “photosynthesis” that occurs in this piece.
Form: Either life-size or larger-than-life human soil sculpture which appears to be falling from the sky. Crafted from dirt and planted with wheat seeds to grow grass. 
Content: I see this is a message about us as humans being a part of the earth. The blurb on the site described this as being about “what goes inside us, comes out of us” (I think in reference to the food we eat), but I really do interpret this as having further meaning. I almost see this as a sort of life cycle; once we die, our bodies are buried (unless you’re cremated or something lol), thus becoming a part of the earth. It’s like a rebirth, in a way.
Process: I’m thinking, based on the listed materials, this artist had to first form a sort of wireframe for this piece. Maybe she had to mold each part over a human model. The site also listed fabric, so likely she had to layer the frame with fabric in order to contain the soil. Then, she probably filled it with soil and planted her seeds. Regular watering and cultivation of wheat seeds ensue over a period of time.
Artist #3
Anicka Yi
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https://www.taipeibiennial.org/2014/en/artists/110-anicka-yi-en2c65.html
Le Pain Symbiotique, 2014
I chose this piece because I really identify with it’s message, even if my own work may or may not reflect that message. It’s a sort of “city”, in this sheltered environment, that is overtaken by decay. Or life, to look at it another way. 
Form: Large PVC “biodome” encasing a decaying bacterial “city”; various organic and inorganic materials used. Rectangular skyscraper shapes standing against spreading bacteria colonies.
Content: I feel that this piece represents a sort of “return to the earth”, so to speak. The description cites bacterium and mother nature taking over our elaborate infrastructure long after humans are gone. The site describes this as “entropy.” This, to me, represents the natural world’s ability to prevail, despite our best efforts.
Process: I’m not exactly sure what the artists’ exact process was here, but I’m thinking she had to first construct this “city” within this PVC biome. The site lists materials such as soap, rice, dough, etc. I’m thinking she had to combine some of these materials and allow them to interact with one another in order for bacterial growth to occur. This likely took a decent amount of time for certain organic materials to decay and chemical reactions to occur.
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chengyw-cofa-blog · 6 years ago
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Agnes Denes , Wheatfield, 1982
Agnes Denes is a giant among land artists. Her most well-known project is probably the 1982 piece "Wheatfield -- A Confrontation," in which she planted a field of golden wheat on two acres of a landfill near Wall Street and the World Trade Center in Manhattan. She weeded, irrigated and cultivated the mini oasis, bringing the essence of rural America into the throngs of America's urban epicenter. 
I like the idea of the confrontation between nature and artifice. 
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i-am-an-invisible-man · 7 years ago
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Wheatfield - A Confrontation: Battery Park Landfill, Lower Manhattan
Agnes Denes 
1982
Performance piece 
During the summer of 1982 artist Agnes Denes planted, cultivated, and harvested a two acre wheat field in a landfill just outside the financial district. 
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carolinecastro123 · 5 years ago
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In 1982 Agnes Denes cultivated, grew, and harvested a two-acre wheatfield in downtown Manhattan
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historyinfotos-blog · 7 years ago
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A wheatfield in the heart of Manhattan, 1982
A wheatfield in the heart of Manhattan, 1982
In 1982 Agnes Denes cultivated, grew, and harvested a two-acre wheatfield in downtown Manhattan. Before the high-rises, condos and financial centers of Battery Park City, the area behind the Twin Towers was a landfill. In 1982, artist Agnes Denes was commissioned by the Public Art Fund to create one of the most significant pieces of public work Manhattan has ever seen. Instead of a sculpture,…
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mariepierreleroux · 7 years ago
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The Living Pyramid (2015/2017) Flowers, grasses, soil, wood, and paint
 9 × 9 × 9 m.
Documenta 14, 2017.
Agnes Denes (1931, Budapest) ’s study into dynamic patterning is best witnessed in her series of pyramids: there are pyramids created from 11,000 fir trees, blocks of crystal, and microscopic piles of human dust; there are drawn pyramids that morph into snail shells, flying birds, and manta rays. Some are made of Plexiglas filled with oil and polluted water, others are prototypes for future cities. One of the largest realized is The Living Pyramid (2015), installed at Socrates Sculpture Park, Long Island City, New York. Constructed of stacked wooden terraces filled with soil and thousands of various living plants, the sculpture arcs nine meters up toward the sky. It is a social structure. Social because the planted material conveys ideas of evolution and regeneration; the work also cultivates a micro-society of people responsible for its planting and ongoing care.
See also her work entitled Wheatfield – A Confrontation, a six-month project in 1982, where two acres of New York’s Battery Park landfill were cleared by hand and planted with wheat. The grain stalks ripening under the shadows of the then-standing World Trade Center towers became a sign for the paradoxical effects of globalization: how increased trade and capital flows produce drastic inequities. The harvested seeds from Wheatfield were later distributed through networks worldwide as a way to draw attention to food crises. As Denes reflects on the work, the seeds were more than utilitarian: “they represented misuse of land, greed, and misplaced priorities.”
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caveartfair · 7 years ago
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10 Female Land Artists You Should Know
Fleeing the confines of studios, galleries, and museums, the Land Artists of the 1960s and ’70s turned the earth’s surface into their canvas. Suddenly, art could be dirt, stone, sand, and sky. It could vanish in the wind or permanently alter a landscape. It didn’t need to be bought or sold.
(Using the organic world as an artistic medium was nothing out of the ordinary to many non-Western cultures, of course—think of the geoglyphs in the Nazca desert, or “Nazca Lines,” in Peru—but within the context of Western art, it was groundbreaking.)
While the definition of Western art expanded in this era, the image of the artist narrowed. The Land Artist was seen as a rugged cowboy, colonizing the American West with bulldozers, guns, and cranes. The Land Artist was also quintessentially male. Yet, in practice, this was far from the case. Dozens of female creatives pioneered this movement alongside their male counterparts.
And financial support came from women, too. Earthworks were often expensive to make, and required patronage—which many Land Artists found in gallerist Virginia Dwan. Dwan funded Robert Smithson’s Spiral Jetty (1970), Walter De Maria’s Lightning Field (1977), and Charles Ross’s Star Axis (1971–76), but she underwrote few projects by women. “Virginia Dwan was the head of a very exclusive boys’ club,” explained the feminist artist Judith Bernstein. “Few women were allowed to enter.”
Recent scholarship, as well as pivotal exhibitions at New York’s SculptureCenter and Brooklyn Museum, have helped to correct this bias, highlighting the women artists who were instrumental in the development of this art form. What follows is a rundown of 10 female Land Artists you should know—though there were many more.
Agnes Denes
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Agnes Denes, Wheatfield - A Confrontation: Battery Park Landfill, Downtown Manhattan, 1982. © Agnes Denes, Courtesy of Leslie Tonkonow Artworks + Projects, NY.
Pioneering conceptual artist Denes once recalled losing her sense of language as a child, after moving from Budapest to Sweden to the United States all before reaching the age of 16. “The creativity had to come out in some way,” she explained. “It blurted itself out in a visual form.”
After beginning her career as a painter, Denes turned to new modes of artmaking in the ’60s and created what are considered to be the first public artworks to engage with ecological concerns. Over her five-decade-long career (and counting), Denes has tackled a variety of subjects from mathematics to philosophy, though her primary dealer Leslie Tonkonow has cited this artistic range as a potential barrier to public recognition.
“It’s difficult to get your head around all the things she’s done,” Tonkonow has said. “I do honestly think that’s why she hasn’t been a household name.”
Denes is best known for her environmental intervention Wheatfield – A Confrontation (1982), in which the artist brought a vacant lot in lower Manhattan to life with two acres of golden wheat. Supported by the Public Art Fund, Denes began by cleaning the area, then covered the city streets in over 200 truckloads of topsoil, and finally installed an irrigation system to support the wheat’s growth cycle over a four-month period. By early fall, the artist harvested over one thousand pounds of grain, which then traveled to 28 cities worldwide in “The International Art Show for the End of World Hunger.”
Denes hoped that the earthwork, planted in Manhattan, would call “people’s attention to having to rethink their priorities.”
More recently, she was included in the 2017 documenta exhibition, where a curved pyramid with tiered steps of planted soil formed an organic monument that grows over time.
Nancy Holt
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Nancy Holt, Sun Tunnels, 1976. Photo by Calvin Chu via Wikimedia Commons.
Holt began her artistic career creating photography, poetry, and video work, but quickly changed course after visiting the Las Vegas desert with her husband and fellow Land Artist Smithson in 1968. “We stepped off the plane into the vastness of the desert,” she said of the encounter. “I had an overwhelming experience of my inner landscape and the outer landscape being identical. It lasted for days. I couldn’t sleep.”
Remaining in the American West, Holt spearheaded a new strain of Land Art that emphasized the land over the art. In contrast to many of her peers, who sought to make their mark on the earth, Holt instead cultivated experiences that enabled viewers to see the landscape through a new lens.
Sun Tunnels (1974–76)—Holt’s best-known piece and a popular pilgrimage for art lovers—epitomizes this effort. Set in the Great Basin Desert of Utah, Sun Tunnels consists of four 18-foot-long tubes that perfectly frame the sunrise and sunset during the summer and winter solstice. The tops of each cylinder are perforated, so that during the daytime the constellations Draco, Perseus, Columba, and Capricorn can be seen projected inside.
When Holt had finally completed the work, she spent days in the desert, sleeping in her Volkswagen camper and photographing the changing effects of light through these unobtrusive concrete forms.
Alice Aycock
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Low Building with Dirt Roof (For Mary), 1973/2010. Alice Aycock Storm King Art Center
Pennsylvania-born sculptor Aycock began creating earthworks in the early ’70s, cutting through the landscape with complex wells, tunnels, and labyrinths. Many of her early pieces invited viewers to crawl and climb through dark, buried spaces—conjuring feelings of claustrophobia, fear, and exhilaration.
“About the time I was six or seven years old, I would be terrified of going to sleep at night for fear of falling into this void of blackness,” the artist said about the origins of these works. “This sense of the precariousness of myself in the world that I have had since I was very young has never gone away.”
With the help of her mother, Aycock built one of her seminal earthworks, Low Building with Dirt Roof (For Mary), on her family’s farm in 1973. Resembling a partially buried house, the structure rises just inches off the ground, hiding in the bucolic landscape under a planted roof that matches the crops of the surrounding fields. According to the artist, the piece is redolent of everything from a Greek tomb to a frontier home, a dream state to her grandparents’ attic.
To fully experience the work, viewers must lie down corpse-like in the small entrapment, bringing their bodies as close as possible to the earth��s surface. The piece was recreated at New York’s Storm King Art Center in 2010.
Lita Albuquerque
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Lita Albuquerque, Southern Cross from Stellar Axis: Antarctica, Ross Ice Shelf, 2006. Photo by Jean de Pomereu.
“It is natural to use the earth as a canvas. I think of earth as a sculpture in space,” said Albuquerque, whose career spans both the Light and Space and Land Art movements.
For Albuquerque, humanity’s landing on the moon in 1969 marked a seismic shift in artistic perspective, which she compares to the discovery of one-point perspective during the Renaissance. Indeed, her works are often best viewed from above to better reveal their position in the cosmos. (In the ’70s and ’80s, Albuquerque became known for her ephemeral pigment drawings, which she installed everywhere from the Mojave Desert to Washington, D.C., to the Great Pyramids of Giza.)  
Funded in part by the National Science Foundation, Albuquerque’s Stellar Axis: Antarctica (2006) epitomized this decades-long effort. The first artwork ever installed on Antarctica, Stellar Axis consisted of 99 fabricated blue spheres, which corresponded to the location of 99 stars above. The size of the spheres reflected the brightness of the stars. Over the course of the installation, the earth rotated and the alignment between the constellation of spheres and stars shifted, marking the passing of time and space.
“In realizing this work, my aim was to encourage the public to look up and out, not in and down,” Albuquerque explains, “to guide people from our everyday reality to the larger stellar movements and their energy.”
Mary Miss
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Mary Miss, South Cove, 1988-Present. Photo by Wally Gobetz, via Flickr.
While Holt installed earthworks in remote locations, often miles from any town or sign of human activity, her contemporary Miss placed her land pieces in highly trafficked public spaces, such as the Union Square subway station and Beijing’s Olympic Park. Miss often highlights transitional points in the landscape—where land meets water or valleys turn into mountains—and transforms them into areas for exploration and meditation.
Situated at the Southern tip of Manhattan, her South Cove (1984–87) combines pillars, benches, walkways, bridges, and blue lights into a permanent installation that draws New Yorkers towards the river and offers a quiet space amid the hectic city. “This whole ground is alive,” Holt said of the complex structure, which she produced in collaboration with the architect Stan Eckstut and the landscape architect Susan Child.
Today, Miss continues to lure urbanites to nature through her organization “City as Living Laboratory,” which raises awareness about environmental sustainability through artistic collaborations in public spaces.
Ana Mendieta
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Corazón de Roca con Sangre (Rock Heart with Blood), 1975. Ana Mendieta Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden
Cuban-born Mendieta moved to the United States in 1961 at the age of 12, staying in refugee camps with her sister before relocating to Iowa. Mendieta’s father remained in Cuba as a political prisoner, and years of separation left the artist craving a deeper connection with the world around her.
This childhood trauma permeates her “Silueta (Silhouette)” series, produced between 1973 and 1978, in which the artist physically embeded her body into the landscape. For these “earth body” works, Mendieta would cover herself with blood, fire, flowers, feathers, and wood, and push herself into the ground until she left her mark. Her flesh touched beaches, archaeological sites, and Mexican caves, among other locations, in radical gestures that combined shamanistic rituals, performance art, and the natural world.
Mendieta’s creative output is often overshadowed by her tragic death. On September 8, 1985, Mendieta fell from the 34th-floor window of her Greenwich Village apartment at the age of 35. Her husband, the Minimalist sculptor Carl Andre, was accused of murder and later acquitted of the charges. In recent years, the activist group WHEREISANAMENDIETA has emerged, protesting exhibitions that feature Andre’s works and raising awareness of domestic abuse.
Maya Lin
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Storm King Wavefield, 2007-2008. Maya Lin Storm King Art Center
While she was still a senior at Yale University, Lin won a competition to design the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington D.C. The commission launched the 21-year-old into art-world stardom, and cast her as an heir of the great Land Artists of the prior generation. The Memorial (or “anti-monument,” as Lin calls it) surely bears elements of earthworks, cutting into the surrounding landscape with a simple, V-shaped granite wall.
Lin installed her largest land piece, Storm King Wavefield, in 2008, covering over 11 acres of Storm King Art Center with seven rows of undulating hills. The swells in the earth, which range in height from 12 to 18 feet, feel insurmountable from afar. But once immersed in the field, the hills become surprisingly approachable, covered in blanket of daisies, short grasses, butterflies, and bees.
“I am interested in perception—psychological perception—in creating an experiential psychological space for viewers,” Lin explains. In this effort, she has identified the female practitioners of Land Art as most inspiring to her practice, favoring Holt’s viewer-centric Sun Tunnels over Smithson’s more imposing Spiral Jetty.
Michelle Stuart
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Small Ledger: Near Town Creek Mound, Mt. Gilead, North Carolina, 1980. Michelle Stuart Parafin
“How better to know a place than to know the earth of a place?” asked Stuart, whose deep love of deserts, seas, and mountains has roots in her California upbringing. After studying at the Chouinard Art Institute, now CalArts, Stuart worked as a topological draftsman for the United States Army Corps of Engineers before moving to Mexico to pursue her interests in Pre-Columbian culture.
In the early ’50s, she assisted the famed Mexican Muralist Diego Rivera, but soon found that she was not “angry” enough to be a political artist. So Stuart decided to return to the earth, and pioneered a new form of Land Art that brought the ground into the gallery.
Stuart’s most celebrated earthworks are her large-scale paper scrolls, for which the artist meticulously rubbed paper and muslin into the earth’s surface, leaving a residue on the material. Stuart considers these pieces to be drawings, gaining their color and texture directly from the soil. In a monumental gesture, she once unfurled a 460-foot-long scroll down a mountainside in northern New York, marking an escarpment where Niagara Falls had flowed approximately 12,000 years earlier.
While Stuart traveled as far as Nepal and New Zealand to record diverse terrains, she discovered that some of the richest soil exists much closer to home—in Sayreville, New Jersey. Stuart heard about the remarkable red clay there from Smithson, and memorialized the soil in four large panels, titled Sayreville Strata Quartet (1976), now housed at Dia: Beacon.
Beverly Buchanan
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Untitled (Double Portrait of Artist with Frustula Sculpture), . Beverly Buchanan "Beverly Buchanan – Ruins and Rituals" at Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn
In 1981, Mendieta curated an exhibition “Third World Women Artists of the United States” at A.I.R. Gallery, which advocated for intersectionality and inclusion in the feminist movement, and selected three cast concrete sculptures by African-American artist Buchanan for the show.
Like Mendieta, Buchanan championed artmaking that was both political and personal, spanning a variety of media from sculpture to video, photography to land art. After working for a decade as a public health educator, Buchanan found mentorship from painters Norman Lewis and Romare Bearden in the ’70s and changed course, dedicating herself to artmaking that addressed the character and history of the American South.
Buchanan set her earthwork Marsh Ruins (1981) in Georgia’s Marshes of Glynn, just miles away from St. Simons Island, where a group of slaves committed suicide in 1803. There, she planted three concrete forms and covered them in a layer of tabby—a mixture of sand, water, and lime that was used in the construction of plantations and slave living quarters. Marsh Ruins gradually cracked and sunk into the mud, an erosion process that Buchanan captured in video.
Whether the ephemeral monuments evoked a cleansing of the land from its past atrocities or signaled the earth’s inability to heal is open to interpretation.
—Sarah Gottesman
from Artsy News
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aiiaiiiyo · 2 years ago
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aiiaiiiyo · 5 years ago
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In 1982 Agnes Denes cultivated, grew, and harvested a two-acre wheatfield in downtown Manhattan. [1600x1060] Check this blog!
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aiiaiiiyo · 7 years ago
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In 1982 Agnes Denes cultivated, grew, and harvested a two-acre wheatfield in downtown Manhattan, a few blocks away from the World Trade Center and the heart of the financial district. [album inside] Check this blog!
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