Product Details
Earthwards: Robert Smithson and Art after Babel

Earthwards: Robert Smithson and Art after Babel
By Gary Shapiro

Price: $26.95 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

22 new or used available from $17.95

Average customer review:

Product Description

The untimely death of Robert Smithson in 1973 at age 34 robbed postwar American art of an unusually creative practitioner and thinker. Smithson's pioneering earthworks and installations of the 1960s and '70s anticipated concerns with environmentalism and site-specific artistic production. Gary Shapiro's insightful study of Smithson's career is the first book to address the full range of the artist's dazzling virtuosity .


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #523581 in Books
  • Published on: 1997-11-20
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 284 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal
A work's difficulty may be physical or philosophical, geographical or generational, but achieving access must be worth the effort. Smithson's art, writing, and complex but important role in postmodern aesthetics and criticism seem to many to be purposely inaccessible. In this sympathetic, lucid interpretation, Shapiro makes the game of revelation well worth the candle. The transparency of language, the return to the groundwork beneath the false structure of contemporary art, the philosophical implications of environmental concerns and site-specific creations?all are explored with a view to marking the artist's place in the intellectual legacy of modern aesthetic discourse. Smithson's biography is still to be written, and his eventual place in art history is yet to be determined. Until then, this book is a splendid analysis of this powerful thinker and a valuable addition to the literature on contemporary artists.?Paula Frosch, Metropolitan Museum of Art Lib., New York
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From the Inside Flap
"Robert Smithson, more than any other one artist, defined the terms of what is now called postmodernism. In this amazingly good-humored book he finds his ideal commentator. Gary Shapiro has important things to say about Dewey, Derrida, Hegel, and Heidegger; about the history of landscape gardening and Poussin's images of Arcadia; and about Duchamp's ready mades and the art criticism of Clement Greenberg. Writing with beautiful lucidity, he demonstrates how much aesthetics has to gain from a close-up study of one of the greatest recent American artists (and art writers). Art critics will find in this book a highly original account of a figure they have often written about. Aestheticians shall discover in this graceful text radically original perspectives on many familiar themes. Impressive in its erudition, effortlessly wide-reaching in its references, Shapiro's book inaugurates what will be a highly productive dialogue among artists, art writers, and philosophers of art."--David Carrier, Carnegie Mellon University

"It is an inspiration to analyze Robert Smithson's earthworks through the lens of Martin Heidegger's philosophy of art, in which the concept of earth plays so central a role. It is fitting artist and philosopher together in a way that makes salient the profound originality of each. But this is only one of the inspired connections Gary Shapiro manages to find between the work of this tremendous artist, and a body of thought which clarifies, enhances, and interprets it. Shapiro's own text is a model of lucidity and care, aesthetic sympathy, and philosophical respect. Smithson has found in him the thinker, the critic, the explainer that the weight, power, and dignity of his work has needed."--Arthur C. Danto

From the Back Cover
"Robert Smithson, more than any other one artist, defined the terms of what is now called postmodernism. In this amazingly good-humored book he finds his ideal commentator. Gary Shapiro has important things to say about Dewey, Derrida, Hegel, and Heidegger; about the history of landscape gardening and Poussin's images of Arcadia; and about Duchamp's ready mades and the art criticism of Clement Greenberg. Writing with beautiful lucidity, he demonstrates how much aesthetics has to gain from a close-up study of one of the greatest recent American artists (and art writers). Art critics will find in this book a highly original account of a figure they have often written about. Aestheticians shall discover in this graceful text radically original perspectives on many familiar themes. Impressive in its erudition, effortlessly wide-reaching in its references, Shapiro's book inaugurates what will be a highly productive dialogue among artists, art writers, and philosophers of art." (David Carrier, Carnegie Mellon University)


Customer Reviews

Robert Smithson4
Robert Smithson, precurser of land art and author of the "Spiral Jetty", is one of the major artists of our century. "Earthwards..." offers a great insight into Smithson's opus and contains wonderful illustrations of his works.