POSTMODERNISM IN ART: AN INTRODUCTION from object to concept: environment, performance and installation
May 20, 2015
POSTMODERNISM IN ART: AN
INTRODUCTION
from object to concept: environment, performance and installation
Walter De Maria Lightning Field (1971) Western New Mexico
Richard Long (1967) A Line Made by Walking England.
Robert Smithson
Nonsite, Franklin, New Jersey
Robert Smithson“One thing films have is the power to take perception elsewhere” (Smithson [1971] 1979, p.105)
Spiral Jetty (1970)Actual work made in the Great Salt Lake in Utah.
Robert Smithson“Like the nonsite, the Jetty is not a discrete work, but one link in a chain of signifiers which summon and refer to one another in a dizzying spiral. For where else does the Jetty exist except in the film which Smithson made, the narrative he published, the photographs which accompany that narrative, and the various maps, diagrams, drawings, etc., he made about it?” (Owens [1979] 1994, p.47)
Ana MendietaAna Mendieta, untitled from the Silhueta Series. photographs of performance-based earthworks, Mexico (1973-1980)
Rape Scene (1973)
Hannah Wilke (1977)
Judy Chicago (1971)
Hannah Wilke (1978-81) Potrait of the Artist with Her Mother, Selma Butter
Hannah Wilke (1992) Intra Venus [detail]
Laurie Anderson
Mach 20 (1983), from United States
Clip from “O Superman” ([1981]1982)
Installation
Mark Rosenthal suggested that Installation art might be best understood when broken up as follows:
Enchantments
Impersonations
filled-space
Interventions
Rapprochements
Site-specific
EnchantmentRight: Lucas Samaras (1966) Mirror Room. Below: Ilya Kabakov The Man who Flew in to Space (1985)
Impersonations
Jannis Kounellis (1969) Untitled
Interventions
Vito Acconci (1972) in Sonnabend Gallery, New york
Rapproachments
Christo and Jeanne-Claude
Bruce Nauman (1970-1) Green Light Corridor
References
Owens, C ([1979] 1994) Earthwords, in Owens, C Beyond Recognition: Representation, Power and Culture. London, University of California Press. Pp. 40-51
Smithson ([1971] 1979) A Cinematic Atopia, in Holt, N (ed.) The writings of Robert Smithson. New York, New York University Press.
Appendix: Robert Smithson Site1. Open Limits
2. A series of points
3. Outer Coordinates
4. Subtraction
5. Indeterminate Certainty
6. Scattered Information
7. Reflection
8. Edge
9. Some Place (physical)
10. Many
Non-Site1. Closed Limits
2. An Array of Matter
3. Inner Coordinates
4. Addition
5. Determinate Uncertainty
6. Contained Information
7. Mirror
8. Center
9. No Place (abstract)
10. One