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The central figure in this book is the American artist Robert Smithson, who achieved cult status in the international art scene during the 1960s and 1970s and continues to generate great interest among artists and curators to this day. In 1971, Smithson realized the famous Land Art work Broken Circle/Spiral Hill for the exhibition Sonsbeek 71 in Emmen, the Netherlands. It is one of only three Land Art works in the world by Smithson that still remain preserved. For the first time, this book brings together a complete selection of archival material related to the work — ranging from photographs, film scripts and drawings to original manuscripts and letters — spread over different archives in the Netherlands and the US.
The research for this publication was conducted in close collaboration with Nancy Holt, Robert Smithson's partner, as well as with the Smithson Estate/James Cohan Gallery in New York. Our special thanks go to them for their generosity in supporting the book and their tireless efforts in providing us with information and getting together all the archival material for the book.
Robert Smithson: Art in Continual Movement is part of Land Art Contemporary With the generous financial support of or partners: SKOR | Foundation for Art and Public Domain, Land Art Contemporary, and of the Mondriaan Fund, LEADER, Municipality of Emmen, Province of Drenthe
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Book Launch: March 30 at the symposium Rethinking Robert Smithson
Authors: Max Andrews, Eric C. H. de Bruyn, Stefan Heidenreich,
"As long as artists are outside the dialectics of nature, art will be abstract currency…. If museums are not to become esoteric banks, they must reach people of all classes. This does not mean an appeal to the 'masses'; rather, each person must be respected no matter where he happens to be in terms of site, nature, politics, or value."
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