TY - JOUR
T1 - A disturbing intimacy
T2 - Robert Smithson and the end of ecology
AU - Maimon, Vered
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2024.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - This essay offers an interdisciplinary approach to the critical writings and artistic works of Robert Smithson in light of current discussions on the Anthropocene, and calls for what Timothy Morton defines as an ‘ecology without nature’. By mobilizing scholarly fields such as art history, aesthetics, anthropology, philosophy, and psychology, it propose new perspectives on Smithson’s embrace of entropy as a specific form of artistic practice; and his dialectic of Site and Nonsite through which he ‘reclaimed’ polluted industrial sites for his art works. In particular, it focuses on Smithson’s interest in scale as manifested most clearly in the Spiral Jetty (1970). This concern is often analyzed through phenomenological theories of perception that focus on the human subject. Yet, scale can be disorienting in ways that move beyond the category of the human subject, by suggesting the possibility of contact with and an imposition from unseen distant entities that nonetheless feel very close. This disturbing intimacy challenges the divisions between subject and object, human and inhuman, organic and inorganic and offers new insights into Smithson’s practice.
AB - This essay offers an interdisciplinary approach to the critical writings and artistic works of Robert Smithson in light of current discussions on the Anthropocene, and calls for what Timothy Morton defines as an ‘ecology without nature’. By mobilizing scholarly fields such as art history, aesthetics, anthropology, philosophy, and psychology, it propose new perspectives on Smithson’s embrace of entropy as a specific form of artistic practice; and his dialectic of Site and Nonsite through which he ‘reclaimed’ polluted industrial sites for his art works. In particular, it focuses on Smithson’s interest in scale as manifested most clearly in the Spiral Jetty (1970). This concern is often analyzed through phenomenological theories of perception that focus on the human subject. Yet, scale can be disorienting in ways that move beyond the category of the human subject, by suggesting the possibility of contact with and an imposition from unseen distant entities that nonetheless feel very close. This disturbing intimacy challenges the divisions between subject and object, human and inhuman, organic and inorganic and offers new insights into Smithson’s practice.
KW - Anthropocene
KW - art
KW - ecology
KW - entropy
KW - Robert Smithson
KW - Spiral Jetty
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85190892105&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/14744740241247840
DO - 10.1177/14744740241247840
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AN - SCOPUS:85190892105
SN - 1474-4740
JO - Cultural Geographies
JF - Cultural Geographies
ER -