Nancy Holt

Nancy Holt

Nancy Holt (born April , 1938) is an American artist famous for her public sculpture, installation art and land art. Throughout her career, Holt has also produced works in other mediums, including film, photography, and writing artist’s books.

Nancy Holt
Born April 5, 1938 (1938-04-05) (age 73)
Worcester, Massachusetts
Nationality American
Field Sculpture, photography, film, writing
Movement Environmental art and land art

Contents

Biography

Nancy Holt was born in Worcester, Massachusetts. She spent a great deal of her childhood in New Jersey.[1] She was educated at Tufts University in Medford, Massachusetts.[1] Three years after graduating, she married fellow environmental artist Robert Smithson in 1963. Holt began her artistic career as a photographer and as a video artist. This involvement with photography and camera optics are thought to have influenced her later earthworks, which are “literally seeing devices, fixed points for tracking the positions of the sun, earth and stars.”[2] Today Holt is most widely known for her large-scale environmental works, Sun Tunnels and Dark Star Park. However, she has created site-specific environmental works in public places all over the world. Holt has contributed to various publications, which have featured both her written articles and photographs. She has also authored several books. Holt has received five National Endowment for the Arts Fellowships, New York Creative Artist Fellowships, and a Guggenheim Fellowship.[1] She currently works and resides in Galisteo, New Mexico.[3]

Artistic Style

The Land Art Tradition

Holt is associated with earthworks or land art. Land art emerged in the 1960s, coinciding with a growing ecology movement in the United States, which asked people to become more aware of the negative impact they can have on the natural environment. Land art changed the way people thought of art; it took art out of the gallery or museum and into the natural landscape, the product of which were huge works engaging elements of the environment. Unlike much of the commercialized art during this time period, land art could not be bought or sold on the art market. Thus, it shifted the perspective of how people all over the world viewed art.

Land art was typically created in remote, uninhabited regions of the country, particularly the Southwest. Some attribute this popular location for land art to artists’ need to escape the turmoil in the United States during the 1960s and 70s by turning to the open, uncorrupted land of the West.[2] Holt believes this artistic movement came about in the United States due to the vastness of the American landscape.[4] As a result of earthworks not being easily accessible to the public, documentation in photographs, videos, drawings became imperative to their being seen. The first exhibit of contemporary land art was at the Virginia Dwan Gallery in New York in 1968.[5] Other earth artists who emerged during this time include James Turrell, Walter De Maria, Michael Heizer, and Dennis Oppenheim.

Perception of Time and Space

Holt’s works of art often deal with issues of how people perceive time and space. The various monumental works she has created blend with and complement their environment. Works such as Hydra’s Head do not merely sit in their environments, but are made of the land, stand on it and are created to be harmonious with the land. The pools in this work are at the top of concrete tubes imbedded in the ground. The land already at the site surrounds these pools. They reflect the natural landscape, while not disturbing it. Holt thinks about human scale in relation to the work she creates.[6] People can interact with the works and become more aware of space, of their own visual perception, and of the order of the universe.[6] Holt’s works incorporate the passage of time and also function to keep time. For example, Annual Ring functions so that when sunlight falls through the hole in the dome and fits perfectly into a ring on the ground, it is solar noon on the summer solstice.[6] At different times, the sun falls differently on the work and other holes in the dome align with celestial occurrences. Holt has said that she is concerned with making art that not only makes an impact visually, but is also functional and necessary in society,[7] as seen in works like Sky Mound, which serves a dual function as a sculpture and park and it also generates alternative energy.

In her works, Holt creates an intimate connection to nature and the stars, saying, "I feel that the need to look at the sky-at the moon and the stars-is very basic, and it is inside all of us. So when I say my work is an exteriorization of my own inner reality, I mean I am giving back to people through art what they already have in them."[6] In other words, Holt is saying that people have within them a basic need to observe the sky and through her works she wants to highlight and make people aware of that need.

Collaboration

Collaboration with architects, engineers, construction crews, and the like is an essential part of creating land art. Solar Rotary is a work located on the campus of the University of South Florida in Tampa, Florida. The work, consists of 20 ft (6.1 m). aluminum poles topped with a swirl of metal called a shadow caster, which casts a circle of light on a central seat when it is solar noon on the day of the summer solstice. On five days a year at different times, the shadow caster is designed to create a circle of light around plaques placed in the ground that mark important events in Florida’s history.[8] Thus, for Solar Rotary, Holt employed Dr. Jack Robinson, an archaeo-astronomer and professor to help her, among other things, to plot the sun’s coordinates for the work.[8] For almost all of Holt’s works, she has had some collaboration. For Dark Star Park, Holt coordinated with developer J.W. Kaempfer, Jr., of the Kaempfer Company, in integrating the design of his adjacent building, Park Place Office Building into her design for the park. She also worked in collaboration with an architect, landscape architect, engineers, and real estate developers on the work.[9] For Rock Rings, Holt searched far and wide to find the right masons to work on the piece and also had local stone called schist, which was 250-million-years old, quarried by hand for the work.[6] Despite all of the collaboration, Holt notes that she is always present for the construction of her artworks.[6]

Analysis of Major Works

Sun Tunnels

Sun Tunnels is located in the Great Basin Desert outside of the ghost town of Lucin, Utah. The work is a product of Holt’s interest in the great variation of intensity of the sun in the desert compared to the sun in the city.[6] Holt searched for and found a site which was remote and empty.

"It is a very desolate area, but it is totally accessible, and it can be easily visited, making Sun Tunnels more accessible really than art in museums . . . A work like Sun Tunnels is always accessible . . . Eventually, as many people will see Sun Tunnels as would see many works in a city-in a museum anyway."[6]

The work consists of four massive concrete tunnels (18 feet long and nine feet in diameter), which are arranged in an “X” configuration to total a length of 86 feet (26 m). Each tunnel reacts differently to the sun, aligned with the sunrise, sunset, or the summer or winter solstice. Someone visiting the site would see the tunnels immediately with their contrast to the fairly undifferentiated desert landscape. Approaching the work, which can be seen one to one-and-a-half miles away, the viewer’s perception of space is questioned as the tunnels change views as a product of their landscape.[10]

The tunnels not only provide a much-needed shelter from the sweltering desert sun, but once inside the dazzling effect of the play of light within the tunnels can be seen. The top of each tunnel has small holes, forming on each, the constellations of Draco, Perseus, Columba, and Capricorn, respectively.[6] The diameters of the holes differ in relation to the magnitude of the stars represented.[6] These holes cast spots of daylight in the dark interiors of the tunnels, which appear almost like stars. Holt has said of the tunnels, "It’s an inversion of the sky/ground relationship-bringing the sky down to the earth."[6] This is a common theme in Holt’s work. She sometimes creates this relationship with reflecting pools and shadow patterns marked on the ground, like in her work Star Crossed.[6]

Dark Star Park

Dark Star Park was commissioned by Arlington County, Virginia in 1979, in conjunction with an urban-renewal project.[7] Construction of the work began in 1984. Holt worked with an architect, landscape architect, engineers, and real estate developers on the project.[7] The artwork is at once a park and a sculpture. Built on two-thirds of an acre of land where a run-down, old gas station and warehouse once stood, Holt transformed the space.[7] The park consists of five spheres, two pools, four steel poles, a stairway, a large tunnel for passage, a smaller tunnel for viewing only and plantings of crown vetch, winter creeper, willow oak, and earth and grass.[11]

The forms stand in stark contrast to the busy and highly developed commercial area that surrounds the space. There are places to walk and sit within the park, giving a passersby a chance to escape from the urban environment. Dark Star Park is more socially interactive than Holt’s other works. Holt paid attention to how people both inside and outside the park would see the spheres. The work alters the viewer’s perception by using curvilinear forms, such as the walkways that mimic the curving roads surrounding the site. Walking in the park or driving by it, viewers may mistake spheres of different sizes to actually be the same size or one sphere may eclipse another. The tunneled passages into the park frame certain sculptural elements, as do the reflections in the pools. However, Holt has made sure not to alienate the park entirely from its surroundings. The spheres are made of gunite (a sprayable mixture of cement and sand), asphalt, precast concrete tunnels, steel poles and stone masonry.[7] These materials relate the park to the buildings located near the artwork.

The work explores the concept of time and our relationship to the universe. When approaching one of the spheres, a visitor to the park might be reminded of the lunar surface[11] or when glancing at the quiet pools of water around the spheres, may relate them to craters.[7] This is no coincidence. Holt has a fascination with solar eclipses, as well as in the shadows cast by the sun on the surface of the earth[11] and the name of the park is a reference to the astronomical appearance of the large spheres that are its most distinct features. In speaking about the name Holt has said, "It’s called Dark Star Park because in my imagination these spheres are like stars that have fallen to the ground-they no longer shine-so I think of the park/artwork in a somewhat celestial way."[6] By engaging the viewer with these spheres and the other elements surrounding them in the park, Holt brings the vast scale of nature and the cosmos back to human scale. Time is also a major part of this work. Once a year on August 1 at 9:32 am, the shadows cast by two of the spheres and their four adjacent poles align with permanent asphalt shadow patterns outlined on the ground.[7] This date was selected by the artist to commemorate the day in 1860 when William Ross bought the land that today is Rosslyn, Virginia, where the park is situated.[7]

Holt took on the challenging task of playing many roles in the park’s creation, becoming at once an artist, landscape designer, and committee member for approving plans for a nearby building. To take on all three roles possibly had never been done before by an artist, thus the park and its designer remain important to the history of art.

"I was the landscape designer as well as the sculptor, so the whole park became a work of art. And I was on the committee to approve the architectural design of the building adjacent to the park. I don’t think either of these situations ever happened before for an artist, so that was unusual, and it broke new ground for public art."[6]

The work was surveyed in June 1995. At that time “treatment was needed.”.[9] Thus, seven years later, when the park was finally restored in 2002 it was long overdue.

Sky Mound

Located in Northern New Jersey, Sky Mound sits where a 57-acre (230,000 m2), 100-foot (30 m)-high landfill once stood.[12] The state’s Hackensack Meadowland Development Commission (HMDC) asked Holt to reclaim the site in an effort to provide an environmentally safe spot for plant and animal life to reside and for humans to enjoy.[13]

Still unfinished in April 2008, the landfill is to be turned into an earth sculpture and public park. The landfill has been covered with grass. Ten mounds stand upon the site, as well as steel poles, plants, and a pond, designed for the approximately 250 species of migratory birds that visit the area seasonally.[13] There will eventually be wind indicators and gravel paths. On several astronomically significant dates each year, the work will provide its viewer with unique views of the sun, moon, and several stars.

In addition, a series of arcing pipes will go down into the landfill, recovering methane from the 10 million tons of garbage below.[12] This will provide an alternative source of energy for those in the community.

Sky Mound’s location makes it visible and accessible to many people. Holt believes the work will increase awareness of the complex problem of how we dispose of our waste and trash.[12] It also raises questions about the sun, as every ecosystem depends on the sun and its energy for survival.[14] In 1991, funding on Sky Mound was stopped to perform a technological study at the site; currently construction remains postponed.[15]

Films

Holt has also made a number of films and videos since the late 1960s, including Mono Lake, (1968) (also with artist Michael Heizer), East Coast, West Coast (1969), and Swamp (1971) in collaboration with her late husband Robert Smithson. Points of View: Clocktower (1974) features conversations between Lucy Lippard and Richard Serra, Liza Bear and Klaus Kertess, Carl Andre and Ruth Kligman and Bruce Brice and Tina Girouard.[16] In 1978, she produced a 16mm color film documenting the seminal work Sun Tunnels.

Selected Artworks

  • Sun Tunnels (1973–76), Great Basin Desert, Utah
  • Hydra’s Head (1974), Artpark, Lewiston, New York
  • Rock Rings (1977–78), Western Washington University, Bellingham, Washington
  • 30 Below (1979), Lake Placid, New York
  • Wild Spot (1979–1980), Wellesley, Massachusetts
  • Star-Crossed (1979–81), Miami University, Oxford, Ohio
  • Dark Star Park (1979–1984), Rosslyn, Virginia
  • Annual Ring (1980–81), Federal Building, Saginaw, Michigan
  • Time Span (1981), Laguna Gloria Art Museum, Austin, Texas
  • Catch Basin (1982), St. James Park Toronto, Canada
  • Electrical System II (1982), Bellman Circuit, Toronto, Canada
  • Sole Source (1983), Dublin, Ireland
  • End of the Line/West Rock (1985), Southern Connecticut State University, New Haven, Connecticut
  • Astral Grating (1987), Fulton Street/Broadway-Nassau Subway Station, New York. Commissioned by Metropolitan Transportation Authority Arts for Transit
  • Skymound (1988–Present), Hackensack, New Jersey
  • Ventilation IV: Hampton Air (1992), Guild Hall, East Hampton, New York
  • Solar Rotary (1995), University of South Florida, Tampa, Florida
  • Up and Under (1998), Hämeenkyrö, Finland

Selected Solo Exhibitions

  • 1972 Art Gallery, University of Montana, Missoula Missouri
  • 1972 Art Center, University of Rhode Island, Kingston
  • 1977 "Young American Filmmakers’ Series," Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, New York
  • 1985 Ace Gallery, Los Angeles, California
  • 1989 Montpellier Cultural Arts Center, Laurel, Maryland
  • 1993 John Weber Gallery, New York, New York
  • 2010 "Sightlines" Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Gallery, New York, New York

Selected Group Exhibitions

  • 1969 “Language III,” Dwan Gallery, New York, New York
  • 1972 “International Art Exhibition,” Pamplona, Spain
  • 1974 “Intervention in the Landscape,” Hayden Gallery, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge
  • 1977 Whitney Biennial, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, New York
  • 1981 “Summer Light,” The Museum of Modern Art, New York, New York
  • 1983 “Monuments and Landscapes: The New Public Art,” McIntosh/Drysdale Gallery, Houston, Texas
  • 1985 “Artist as Social Designer,” Los Angeles County Museum of Art, California
  • 1989 “Making Their Mark,” Cincinnati Art Museum, Cincinnati, Ohio; New Orleans Museum of Art, New Orleans, Louisiana; Denver Art Museum, Denver Colorado; Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
  • 1998 Wiener Kunstverein, Vienna, Austria
  • 1999 “After Image: Drawing Through Process,” Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, California
  • 2007 "Cosmologies" James Cohan Gallery, New York City, New York

References

  1. ^ a b c Van Wagner, Judy Collischan. Long Island Estate Gardens (Greenvale New York: Hillwood Art Gallery, May 22-June 21, 1985), 42.
  2. ^ a b Arnason, H.H. History of Modern Art. 5th ed. (Upper Sadlle River, New Jersey: Prentice Hall, Inc., 2004).
  3. ^ Grosenick, Uta, ed. Women Artists in the 20th and 21st Century, (London: Taschen, 2005).
  4. ^ Brown, Jeffrey. “Online NewsHour: Robert Smithson’s ‘Spiral Jetty' Celebrates its 30th Anniversary.” PBS Online, May 6, 2005.
  5. ^ Doss, Erika. "Twentieth-Century American Art." (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002).
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Saad-Cook, Janet, Charles Ross, Nancy Holt, James Turrell. "Touching the Sky: Artworks Using Natural Phenomena, Earth, Sky and Connections to Astronomy" Leonardo 21, no. 2 (1988): 123.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h Arlington County Department of Parks, Recreation and Community.Nancy Holt: Dark Star Park," http://www.arlingtonarts.org/cultural_affairs/public%20art%20images/dark%20star%20brochure.pdf.
  8. ^ a b Bennett, Lennie. “Nancy Holt, Solar Rotary," St. Petersburg Times, August 6, 2006. http://www.sptimes.com/2006/08/06/Floridian/Nancy_Holt__Solar_Rot.shtml.
  9. ^ a b Smithsonian American Art Museum, Smithsonian Institution Research Information System (SIRIS), http://siris-artinventories.si.edu/ipac20/ipac.jsp?session=1209Y08P255N5.856&profile=ariall&uri=link=3100006~!203174~!3100001~!3100002&aspect=Browse&menu=search&ri=2&source=~!siartinventories&term=Holt%2C+Nancy%2C+1938-+%2C+sculptor.&index=AUTHOR.
  10. ^ Beebe, Mary Livingston. “Tell Me, Is It Flat or Is It Round?” Art Journal 41, no. 2 (1981): 169.
  11. ^ a b c Marter, Joan. “Collaborations: Artists and Architects on Public Sites.” Art Journal 48, no. 4 Critical Issues in Public Art (1989): 316.
  12. ^ a b c McGill, Douglas C. “Jersey Landfill to Become an Artwork.” New York Times, September 3, 1986.
  13. ^ a b Baskin, Anita. “Stonehenge in New Jersey,” Omni, August 1992, 63.
  14. ^ Matlisky, Barbara C. Fragile Ecologies: Contemporary Artists’ Interpretations and Solutions. New York: Rizzoli International, 1992.
  15. ^ Skymound. 2006. http://greenmuseum.org/c/aen/Images/Ecology/sky.php.
  16. ^ Video Data Bank: Points of View: Clocktower

Sources

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