Like a void in the otherwise open range
of Nevada, the Nellis Range, a Connecticut-sized chunk of
desert, harbors five thousand square miles of military-controlled
land, containing landforms and infrastructures that are only
vaguely understood by outsiders.
The CLUI recently featured the
exhibit The Nellis Range Complex: Landscape of Conjecture
at its main office in Los Angeles. The exhibit was open to
the public from October 1 to December 1, 1999, and was installed
inside a customized mobile exhibition unit at the Venice Boulevard
site. The culmination of more than three years of research
and photography, the exhibit contained images, text, maps,
and supporting documents that describe this mysterious landscape
in southern Nevada, the nation's largest restricted area,
and a veritable nation unto itself.
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Nellis
Range Exhibit Unit, which contained the Landscape of Conjecture
installation.
CLUI photo |
Two thousand miles of roads and
an extensive fiber-optic and microwave communication network
connect target areas, maintenance facilities, tracking stations,
testing grounds, and a few full scale bases and R&D centers.
An interactive and evolving simulated enemy landscape, with
command and control bunkers, radar and missile sites, convoys,
railways, industrial areas, and hundreds more individual targets,
trains pilots for confrontations in Middle Eastern, Asian,
Soviet and other potential theaters of war. And on the undisturbed
mountains within the Range there is a landscape frozen in
1940, when it was first closed to public access, where bighorn
sheep and wild horses roam among petroglyphs of the Paiute
and Shoshone Indians, and where miners cabins remain unvandalized,
with glass jars still resting on their shelves
Access to the range is highly limited,
and no one without official business is permitted on site,
nor are civilian aircraft permitted to fly over it. Information
about it is controlled by those whose livelihood is dependent
on its existence, therefore facts about the range are unresolved.
It is thus an ambiguous, uncertain landscape, engendering
speculation, fear, and even confrontation. It is a virtual
terrain, inhabited with the projections of whoever chooses
to gaze upon it, a modern terra incognita.
Known and speculative aspects of
the range were addressed in the CLUI exhibit. The use of the
range as an Air Force training ground and a weapons testing
area were described in detail. Numerous meetings between CLUI
representatives and Air Force personnel led to the release
of some new information, including imagery of the interior
of the range, taken by range managers and released to the
CLUI. Though generally supportive for some time, the Air Force
ultimately withdrew its support of the project, citing security
concerns, though this change in posture coincided with a change
in management of the range.
As a result of this loss of support,
the CLUI also focussed on the more speculative aspects of
the range in the exhibit, the "conjectural" perspectives
of the place, using unofficial sources. "We had to use
the word 'allegedly' a lot," says CLUI Nellis project
manager Matthew Coolidge. "But we got a lot of support
from extremely thorough and meticulous independent researchers
and published experts on the range including Peter Merlin,
Tom Mahood, Mark Farmer, Phil Patton, David Darlington, and
of course Glenn Campbell of the Area 51 Research Center. And
the public affairs department at Nellis was very courteous
and helpful, and grateful that we were able to supply them
with the imagery of the range that we obtained from the normally
independent and secretive range managers."