The Ethics of Earth Art

The Ethics of Earth Art

Amanda Boetzkes

Analyzing the ethical stance of the earth art movement from the 1960s to the present

248 Pages, 6 x 8 in

  • eBook
  • 9781452942674
  • Published: November 30, 2013
BUY
  • Paperback
  • 9780816665891
  • Published: September 2, 2010
BUY

Details

The Ethics of Earth Art

Amanda Boetzkes

ISBN: 9781452942674

Publication date: November 30th, 2013

248 Pages

63

8 x 6

The Ethics of Earth Art is indispensable as a theoretical teasing-out of some of the long under-examined art historical practices that complicate the original genre.—Erika Suderburg, University of California, Riverside


The Ethics of Earth Art charts, in short compass, a path of development from the earth art of the 60s and 70s to the contemporary efforts of Chris Drury, Ana Mendieta, Jackie Brookner, Ichi Ikeda, and others. What is distinctive and intriguing is to have done so through a meditation on how Irigaray and Levinas supplement the informing phenomenological vision traditionally supplied by Merleau-Ponty, showing how earth art takes on a specifically ethical dimension.—David Wood, Vanderbilt University


Since its inception in the 1960s, the earth art movement has sought to make visible the elusive presence of nature. Though most often associated with monumental land-based sculptures, earth art encompasses a wide range of media, from sculpture, body art performances, and installations to photographic interventions, public protest art, and community projects.

In The Ethics of Earth Art, Amanda Boetzkes analyzes the development of the earth art movement, arguing that such diverse artists as Robert Smithson, Ana Mendieta, James Turrell, Jackie Brookner, Olafur Eliasson, Basia Irland, and Ichi Ikeda are connected through their elucidation of the earth as a domain of ethical concern. Boetzkes contends that in basing their works’ relationship to the natural world on receptivity rather than representation, earth artists take an ethical stance that counters both the instrumental view that seeks to master nature and the Romantic view that posits a return to a mythical state of unencumbered continuity with nature. By incorporating receptive surfaces into their work—film footage of glaring sunlight, an aperture in a chamber that opens to the sky, or a porous armature on which vegetation grows—earth artists articulate the dilemma of representation that nature presents.

Revealing the fundamental difference between the human world and the earth, Boetzkes shows that earth art mediates the sensations of nature while allowing nature itself to remain irreducible to human signification.

Amanda Boetzkes is assistant professor of art and design at the University of Alberta.