Roden Crater is expected to
open in two years, Heizer’s Complex City may be complete
within a year, and Charles Ross’ Star Axis is in the final
stages of completion. The Big Land Art projects it seems are alive
and well and moving forward, with the Dia Foundation, Lannan Foundation,
and others making it happen. This issue of the Lay of the Land
discusses some of the “site-based” art activities
along the Hudson River, centered on the town of Beacon, and Dia’s
new 240,000 square foot museum there, greatly supported by Lannan
Foundation. Also in this issue is a report from Marfa, a West
Texas town in a curious and heavily altered condition due to support
from these foundations as well. We hope that this momentum continues
to build, and that new creative land projects will be enabled
at other places, all over the country, further infusing the landscape
with meaning, mystery, and compelling, progressive interpretations.
Incidentally, the fact that the Center is about to open a Northeast
Regional Office in the Hudson River town of Troy, New York (waaay
up river!), is just a coincidence.
This issue also reflects a recent CLUI research
focus on the Pacific Coast of the United States, including the
exhibition of the California Coastal Records Project, currenly
on display at CLUI:Los Angeles.
-Lay of the Land Editors |