Agnes Denes
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Born in 1931 in Budapest (HU)
Lives and works in New-York (US) |
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Rice/Tree/Burial
1977/2012
39 photographs of archive, black & white, diagram, text 20,32 x 25,4 cm each one Purchased in: 2011 |
“Actual space is intrinsically more powerful and specific than paint on a flat surface.” 0 “I consider life itself to be an instinct for growth, for endurance, for the accumulation of force, for power: when there is no will to power, there is decline.” 01 Agnes Denes is an American artist who was first associated with the Conceptual Art movement before she pioneered Land Art. In the late 1960s, she pushed its boundaries in the direction of Ecological Art which covered everything from individual creation to social awareness—a Rousseaudian 1 “eco-logical” esthetic confronting environmental issues. She drew on scientific culture 2 and on the dynamism of contemporary art. 3 Art and Science, both vectors of human knowledge and experience, joined forces to counter an anthropocentric civilization which turns its back on nature—a civilization founded on a suicidal, progressivist idea of nature’s exploitation. It is no longer just a question of landscape as representation, but of Nature itself. The artist intervenes on the site through performances. She develops a singular metaphor of growth —a movement of life and permanent evolution. The work Rice/Tree/Burial today takes the form of: However, Rice/Tree/Burial is above all a work on the scale of nature, the first public eco-logical performance realized by the artist since 1968 in Sullivan county, then repeated starting in 1977 at ArtPark 4 near Niagara Falls. In the first act, the artist planted half an acre of rice. It was a creative process, a metaphor for the nourishing Earth—a maternal figure which naturally engenders life and matter. Luc Jeand’heur 0 Donald Judd, Specific Objects, 1965 01 Friedrich Nietzsche, The Anti-Christ (1888), trans. Judith Norman, in: The Anti-Christ, Ecce Homo, Twilight of the Idols, and Other Writings, edited by Aarond Ridley and Judith Norman (Cambridge University Press 2005). 1 It is in human nature to have the need for nature. 2 Exact sciences, natural sciences, social sciences dealing with Humans, human history, behavior, language, sociology, psychology, and politics. 3 Freedom, critical thinking, poetry. 4 A park dedicated to performing and visual arts, located in Lewiston, NY. 5 This word brings to mind the Labors of Hercules—an extraordinary, lengthy task, at once mythical, iconographical, and symbolic. 6 In Art Park, the artist added a fourth step dedicated to the forces of nature and, for seven days, filmed from a steep ledge overlooking the Niagra Falls. 7 René Descartes. 8 For example: “What would you say the human purpose is?”, “If we are results of a development, in what direction is that development moving?”, etc. |
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