Show Launches New CLUI LA Exhibit Space
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The Formations of Erasure:
Earthworks and Entropy exhibit and Land Art Database terminal
at CLUI, Los Angeles.
CLUI photo
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The new exhibit space at the renovated CLUI Los
Angeles location opened in September with the exhibit Formations
of Erasure: Earthworks and Entropy. The exhibit consisted of
contemporary photographs of earthworks across the United States,
focusing on those that do not have extensive maintenance programs,
and thus have been altered by time and the elements. Most of
the depicted pieces were constructed in the 1970s and,
over time, these structures have receded from the pure, intentional
form of the artist's idea, into a new dynamic form that represents
a collaboration between humans and the nonhuman world.
In addition to the large photographs and text
panels in the exhibit, a computer database was available to
visitors in the gallery, with information on existing and disappeared
land art sculptures across the country.
On October 13, as part of the exhibit, an evening
of talks was held in the space, attended by a crowd which filled
the room to capacity and spilled into the street (the CLUI apologizes
to those that missed the presentation due to lack of space -
please come early to future CLUI events to be sure to get a
seat). Smithson scholar Hikmet Loe, from Salt Lake City, presented
unpublished material on the building of the Spiral Jetty, and
Sam Durant, an artist and teacher at California Institute of
the Arts, gave a multimedia presentation about the Jettys
cultural context, suggesting conceptual strands that link it
to Altamont, George Bataille, and Nirvana.
While the exhibit examined sites that are generally
considered to be "decaying," one function of the exhibit
was to show how meaning can be ascribed to these sites even
if the art has been transformed by erosion, or has disappeared
entirely, and how, in fact, the significance of earthworks can
increase in an inverse relationship to their physical existance.
"An earthwork is there whether you can see it or not,"
said CLUI curator Sarah Simons. "When it becomes invisible,
all that is happening is that the site rises as a component
in the work." The exhibit was open from September 15 to
December 5, 2000.