Spiral Jetty by Robert Smithson: Great Art Explained

Video Statistics and Information

Video
Captions Word Cloud
Reddit Comments

Thanks for sharing! That was a good watch, really wish I could've seen it while it in had water in it.

👍︎︎ 3 👤︎︎ u/aBee150 📅︎︎ Aug 24 2021 🗫︎ replies
Captions
In 1968, astronaut William Anders took this  photo of the earth rising over the moon.   The picture which became known as "Earthrise"  showed the world as a lonely fragile oasis.   And it changed the way we see our planet. It was as if humanity was seeing itself in a  mirror for the first time. Seeing itself as a globe,  as an object, would not only change our  consciousness but also be inextricably   tied up with what would be called "Land Art". Newsreader: "Good evening. Dr Martin Luther King, the apostle of non-violence in the civil rights movement   has been shot to death in Memphis, Tennessee. 1968 was a turbulent year for the United states. And the sudden appearance of "Earth Art" or  "Land art" can be seen as a response to the   heightened political activism of the time, as  well as the emerging environmental movement.   The world was changing and art needed to change  too. Artists were fed up with the gallery system   and the over-commercialization of art and  culture. They were questioning what art was.   Was it only art if it was in a gallery? Or a  museum? Was it only art if you could sell it?   A group of artists, mostly working in New York  city, were looking to transcend the limitations   of painting and sculpture. To do this they  would go west - to the vast desert spaces.   They would find something that was elemental  something that would go beyond physicality.   They were fearless, ambitious,  and daring. They were pioneers. You could say land art existed thousands of  years even before oil painting - but it would   take a group of American artists to bring it  back to the public gaze in the 1960s and 70s.   Artists like Michael Heizer, Robert Smithson and  Nancy Holt had emerged from sculpture, minimalism   and conceptual art. Rather than painting the  landscape they started working outdoors and   sculpting directly INTO the landscape itself.  Instead of paint brushes they would use bulldozers.   And the earth would be not only the site,  but also the materials AND the canvas.   In spring 1970, Robert Smithson and Nancy Holt  visited northern Utah to select a site to   construct an earthwork. With no outlets to the sea  the Great Salt Lake is a "Terminal" lake - only rain   can replenish the lake's waters. We see images of  the spiral jetty looking picturesque, but it is   important to note that the lake has always been  an area of intense industrialisation. It still is.   And it's one of the reasons Smithson chose it. In Smithson's film about the making of Spiral Jetty   we see an abandoned oil rig in the background.  The Union Pacific railroad runs right through it.   Smithson saw his works of art as the "mediators"  between the environment and the economy.  Some art theorists use the term "Land art" and  "Environmental art" interchangeably. But the land art   of Smithson is not so much about ecology or direct  activism. Spiral Jetty should really be seen as a   way of expanding awareness of geological changes.  This was at the core of Smithson's practice.   But who paid for these projects? Land artists may have  shown disdain for the traditional art market, but   their massive outdoor works still required money.  And lots of it. Land art needed wealthy patrons   who were not going to get anything in return - just the chance to feel a part of art history. Robert Smithson was not just an artist - he was an  intellectual, an important writer and a theorist.   It would be his words that gave land art a voice He only created three monumental earth works and his   early death - in the process of creating the third - would lend his work a mythological status.    Smithson moved to New York in the late 1950s. Gallerist Virginia Dwan gave him a solo show in 1959.   And she would eventually fund the  Spiral Jetty. At this time Smithson was   producing paintings, drawings, and collages  inspired by the Abstract Expressionists.   Later his work would take a turn towards  minimalism. The jump from minimalism to   land art is not such a giant leap. While the key  element of land art was often its monumentality   and its site-specific context, it also connected  closely with many of the concerns of minimalism.   In 1963, Smithson married Nancy Holt, a  brilliant artist and a member of the earth, land   and conceptual art movements. She became not  just smithson's wife but his collaborator.   And their partnership would mark a  significant turning point in his career.   Both of them were fascinated by man's imprint  on the natural landscape, and in 1969 they took   a journey through England and Wales, visiting  sites ranging from ancient ruins and quarries   to wild natural places. It had a major influence  on their work. Then in 1968 they took part in the   legendary show "Earthworks" at the Virginia Dwan  gallery in New York. The following year Michael   Heizer created "Double Negative" in Nevada. A year  after that Smithson built the Spiral Jetty in Utah. Rozel point is located in a remote section  of the north end of the Great Salt Lake, whose   waters are four times saltier than the sea. It is  nearly devoid of life. In this harsh environment   only a few organisms like algae and bacteria can  live. Brine shrimp however thrive in this extreme   environment. They are a brilliant red colour and  in Autumn they shed their old shells and deposit   them in the lake. It is the bacteria and algae  that live on the discarded shrimp shells that   provide almost a constant source of colour - ranging  from blood red to rust orange and purple pink.   The colour of the lake was the preliminary  factor that attracted Smithson to the site.   Smithson: "North of the Lucin cut-off, the water is a  red or pink colour due to algae in the brine". To him the pigmentation evoked the primordial seas.   The mirror-like quality of the lake also  appealed to Smithson - not only would he   create a spiral, but the water would act like  an inverse spiral and a mirror at the same time. A big part of Spiral Jetty's appeal  is the sheer audaciousness of it.   And the enormous effort involved in the  construction only adds to its mythological status.   It was made possible by the support of Virginia  Dwan who put up nine thousand dollars for the project.   In April 1970 Smithson received  the lease agreement for 25 acres of land   on the banks of the Great Salt Lake. The rent was $100 per annum. Smithson then obtained permission to  move the six thousand five hundred tons   of basilt and earth from the shoreline. To construct a huge fifteen hundred foot long,   fifteen foot wide, spiral  shaped jetty out on the lake. Part of Spiral Jetty's attraction is how  our senses are heightened when we encounter   artworks larger than us. Interacting with such  a huge piece, requires a shift in perception   which then shifts how one experiences  the world around it. The waters of the   lake were unusually low when construction  began - but it was still an incredible feat. Smithson marked out the shape with poles and  rope, and his contractor Bob Phillips used two   dump trucks, a large tractor, and a front end loader  to haul the tons of rock and earth from the shore   into the lake. This is the first proposal  by Smithson, which they built. With an island   as planned - and you can see that here. But Smithson wasn't happy with the shape   and to the contractors horror, insisted on removing it  entirely and starting again - to new specifications. Despite this setback, Smithson was an artist who made his mark in a very short time. Investigating  the lake - choosing a site - hiring a contractor - and creating the work - took just four weeks.   Spiral Jetty's strange markings deliberately  reference prehistoric architecture - as well as   American Indian "Petroglyphs" found in Utah. Early spirals are found in many places in the Americas.   Spirals fascinated Smithson, and in his writings  he also mentioned their occurrence in galaxies and   nebulae, in the structure of crystals, in the human  ear, and in particular in Constantin Brancusi's   famous portrait of James Joyce. In Smithson's early  work you often find the spiral form.    Near to theSpiral Jetty site, the Bingham copper mines - still active - appealed to his love of industrial sites.   In fact he once proposed an Earthwork to the  owners - but was refused. Some early settlers   believed the center of an ancient universe was  directly UNDER the Great Salt Lake and Spiral Jetty   could be seen as a "portal" to that world. This  would tie into a theory that a book by the science   fiction writer JG Ballard inspired Smithson.  Smithson was a huge fan of science fiction   and in 1967, he took the title of Brian Aldiss'  "Earthworks" to describe his own form of art.   JG Ballard's "The Voices of Time", like the Spiral  Jetty is set in the salt flats, and concerned   with time. Ballard's world is ravaged by climate  change and characters are transformed by landscape. The climax has the main character, a scientist,  building a "Mandala" off the coast of the salt flats.   A mandala is a ritualistic symbol in Asian  cultures, and in the book it is a way of   communicating with the universe. The primary theme  in both of these books is one which was common to   the new wave of science fiction writers - that  of entropy and the breakdown of all things. Entropy is the inevitable and steady deterioration  of a system or society - or in this case a work of art.  Land art might change in unpredictable ways. And that's the point. These works do not exist   in isolation from the world around them, and  land artists embrace entropy - the idea of decay   or even the complete disintegration of their work. From the second Spiral Jetty was created   it has continually changed. Only a year after it  was completed, the rising lake level submerged   it under water. It would reappear briefly in the  1980s then disappear again under 16 feet of water.   Until 2002 - when it would resurface  as white as snow, with encrusted salt. Robert Smithson was killed in a light plane crash  along with the pilot and a photographer, as they   were inspecting one of his Earthworks under  construction on a ranch near Amarillo, Texas.   His story is an American epic. That of a man who leaves the city to search for truth in the vast landscapes of the West. I think the Land Art movement was less  about ecology, than it was about a desire to take art out of the white box of the gallery.   But thanks to its emergence and submergence, Spiral Jetty has become a handy visual metaphor - a symbol of climate change. It seems inevitable that after a few more cycles of high water and extreme drought   the Spiral Jetty will disappear completely - and return to the vast salt bed of the Great Lake - from where it came. Something Smithson  would have been very pleased with.
Info
Channel: Great Art Explained
Views: 143,694
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: art explained, art, history of art, art history, paintings explained, painting, art techniques, arte, onlineart, creative, artnews, fine art, genius, paintings, oil painting, portrait, portrait painting, history, artist, tate modern, New York art, new york, american art, Robert Smithson, the spiral jetty, conceptual art, land art, Michael heizer, Nancy holt, nerwriter, khan academy, utah, the great salt lake
Id: LQv3YqHisZc
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 15min 29sec (929 seconds)
Published: Tue Aug 24 2021
Related Videos
Note
Please note that this website is currently a work in progress! Lots of interesting data and statistics to come.