Newsletter: The Lay of the Land: Archives: SPRING 2005
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INDEX Immersed Towns Surface For Exhibit At CLUI Intentionally Submerged America Subject Of Program Immersed Remains: Terminal Island: Jane Wolff Delves Into The Delta: Tour Of The Monuments Of The Great American Void: Report From The Desert Research
Station: Report From
The Great Basin: Playas, New
Mexico: Coal: Dig It Up, Move It, Burn
It: Sublime Explosive
Pastoral: There Is Something About Colorado Springs Global Positioning
Pivots Around Colorado Springs Reflections
On Chicago Unusual Real
Estate Listing # 2465 Dutch Crater
On Hold CLUI Land
Use Database Upgrades |
Terminal Island
Terminal Island is an artificial landmass in the heart of the ports of Long Beach and Los Angeles, and was the subject of an exhibit at the CLUI Los Angeles from March 31 to May 30th, 2005. The exhibit looked at Terminal Island as a sort of organismic,
flowing, landscape machine, composed of five separate terminal
activities that occur on the island: importation, exportation,
excretion, deportation and expulsion. Each one of these activities
was described in text, and depicted through video captured by
CLUI personnel over the months prior to the exhibit. As the center of the largest port in the Americas, the nation’s economy flows across its thousands of acres of asphalt, in the form of digitized cubes of material trade, in twenty and forty foot equivalences. It was for this, more than anything, that the island grew out of the ocean, an extension of the continental reach towards the orient. Its scale is beyond sensation by the senses, and its functions exceed the imaginations of our daily lives. Terminal Island is like a fictional place, made real by the collective will of America. The exhibit was made possible by a grant from the City of Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs, and the CLUI Fund for the Study of Islands and Distant American Landmasses. A bus and boat tour were also conducted as part of this exhibit.
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