University of Wollongong
Browse

Spiral Jetty, geoaesthetics, and art: Writing the Anthropocene

Download (349.78 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-14, 16:40 authored by Susan Ballard, Elizabeth Linden
Despite the call for artists and writers to respond to the global situation of the Anthropocene, the 'people disciplines' have been little published and heard in the major journals of global environmental change. This essay approaches the Anthropocene from a new perspective: that of art. We take as our case study the work of American land artist Robert Smithson who, as a writer and sculptor, declared himself a 'geological agent' in 1972. We suggest that Smithson's land art sculpture Spiral Jetty could be the first marker of the Anthropocene in art, and that, in addition, his creative writing models narrative modes necessary for articulating human relationships with environmental transformation. Presented in the form of a braided essay that employs the critical devices of metaphor and geoaesthetics, we demonstrate how Spiral Jetty represents the Anthropocenic 'golden spike' for art history, and also explore the role of first-person narrative in writing about art. We suggest that art and its accompanying creative modes of writing should be taken seriously as major commentators, indicators, and active participants in the crafting of future understandings of the Anthropocene.

History

Citation

Ballard, S. & Linden, E. "Spiral Jetty, geoaesthetics, and art: Writing the Anthropocene." The Anthropocene Review 6 .1-2 (2019): 142-161.

Journal title

Anthropocene Review

Volume

6

Issue

1/02/2024

Pagination

142-161

Language

English

RIS ID

134990

Usage metrics

    Categories

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC