On the 25th December 1758 the return of a comet, predicted by
Edmond Halley 53 years earlier, was seen in Germany. News of the arrival was greeted with jubilation in scientific circles around the world
and especially in France where a group of mathematicians had calculated a delay of 618 days, caused by theHalley's Comet photographed in 1910 |
The Plutonium bomb ready
for detonation in July 1945
The test was required as
the 'prompt criticality'
method of detonation was
less certain than the 'gun-type'
Hiroshima weapon.
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The pursuit of knowledge that had been the essence of the
Enlightenment took a dark turn in 1945 and art had little to reflect this. Although film, television, literature and journalism were greatly exercised by the atomic age, suggestions of apprehension hinted at in Joseph Wright's 18th century paintings of scientific
experiments found no expression, in the art of the 20th century, that was equal to the scale of change.
Sphere Within Sphere Arnaldo Pmodoro |
The desire to elicit power from nature motivated the creation of prehistoric cave paintings and was explored by philosophers in classical Greece, but the adjustment from belief in magic to testable theories of nature as physical forces is still not complete. 'Nature' now has layered meanings, one of which has the physical laws of nature operating only in the background to the life and immediate experience of individuals. This idea of nature has evolved to exclude the seemingly abstruse discoveries of science. It has become a habit of mind that science and the phenomena it describes are distinct from life. The use of atomic bombs reinforced this tendency by associating science with mass destruction. Conflating the misgivings associated with the atomic bombing of cities with the uncanny conversion of matter to energy, a part of popular culture derived a sense of science as being a transgression of nature . (1)
Thermonuclear weapons tested from 1952 onwards are one thousand times more powerful than the atomic bombs that ended the Second World War. Convection currents from the explosions were so strong they thrust radioactive material into the stratosphere and around the world. By the 1960s even the bones
of penguins in Antarctica contained detectable amounts of strontium-90. Other radioactive products are now being incorporated into newly-forming rocks. Such a radioactive marker, as well as chemical changes caused by climate change, are cited as a 'golden spike' recording an idetifiable start to the Anthropocene geological era in which humans are the dominant influence on Earth systems.
As well as global warming, caused by reducing the infra-red transparency of the atmosphere carbon dioxide and methane emissions, industrial activity now moves as much material as rivers and glaciers. Humans are now a planetary force on a scale imagined by Percival Lowell in his erroneous but influential books about a supposed civilization creating a huge network of irrigation canals on Mars. Our technosphere, the total quantity of material made or relocated by humans, has been estimated to weigh 30 trillion tons. It takes 20 tons of rock to produce a single gold wedding ring.
In his book the American Technological Sublime David Nye claims that between the start of the 'atomic age' in 1945 and the launch of Apollo 11 in 1969 the impression of awe once associated with nature, in art and literature, also became attached to technology. However the technological sublime is not part of contemporary art. The transformation of the Earth is more likely to be depicted through the ability of film and video editing to join places and the capacity of aerial photography to convey a landscape undiminished by distance.
Proliferation of mass media at the start of the 20th century coincided with the abandonment of perspectival representation of three dimensional space by avant garde art, leaving photography to continue the aesthetic of the sublime. Ansel Adams' photographs of the pristine Sierra Nevada were contemporary with Le Corbusier's photographic book celebrating the cultural importance of aircraft. (2) In the 20th century the National Geographic magazine brought these aesthetics to a mass readership in articles and photographs that tacitly assumed an age of agricultural and industrial improvement would continue unabated with the natural world remaining essentially unchanged in the background, like the painted scenic panels in classical Greek theatre that were the origin of landscape art.
In the tradition of 'sublime' landscape painters such as Albert Bierstandt and Thomas Moran National Geographic developed a style of landscape photography dependent on attaining an ideal viewpoint. The getting of the photograph became part of the story. The Earthrise picture taken by the Apollo 8 astronauts in lunar orbit
on the 24th December 1968 is perhaps the ultimate landscape photograph. The image of the Earth rising over a lifeless Moon is uncanny, revealing the entirety of our planet while conceding nothing of our lived experience of it. Earthrise is beguiling image with a beauty that is hard to define, like a successful abstract picture.
The Apollo 8 Earthrise photograph taken on
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In the 1950s when Jackson Pollock made his abstract paintings it appeared that art had never been further apart from science but his technique of dripping paint onto canvas prefigured a type of sculpture shaped by material determinants - gravity, tension, elasticity - like the formation of actual landscapes. In 1968 Robert Smithson proposed 'non-site' exhibitions that emulated science museums by displaying rocks from a remote site in a gallery, with accompanying maps and photographs. In the 1970s process-driven sculpture combined with the concept of non-sites and Michael Foucalt's 'heterotopias' to evolve a art-form known as 'Earthworks'. (3)
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Virginia Dwan purchased a site on the shore of
(1) Unfinished, Untitled or Not
Yet, 1966 by Eva Hesse Nine dyed net bags, clear
polyethylene sheeting, metal weights and string. Eva Hesse was influenced
by Jackson Pollock, speaking about a different piece she said "
This piece is very ordered. Maybe I'll make it more structured, maybe
I'll leave it changeable. When it's completed, its order could be chaos.
Chaos can be structured as non-chaos. That we know from Jackson
Pollock."
(2)
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Land Art constructions are not necessarily the same as Environmental Art. The 'classic' constructions such as Spiral Jetty were not concerned with modern environmental issues and indeed celebrated our power over nature to some extent. The Palm Islands development is a commercialised legacy of Spiral Jetty. |
In 1990 the Galileo spacecraft flew by the Earth for a gravitational slingshot to accelerate it onward to Jupiter. Carl Sagan recognised the opportunity to see if intelligent life could be detected from space. Although cultivated land was visible in Australia only a broadcast radio signal was deemed to be an unambiguous sign of life. Now contemporary art should feel this similarly ambiguous age of landscape, nature and artifice.
References
(1) Sontag, S. (1966). The imagination of disaster. In: Against interpretation, and other essays: / Farrar,Strauss & Giroux. New York.
(2) Le Corbusier (1935) Aircraft: The New Vision / The Studio. London, New York.
(3) Kastner, J. (2005). Land and environmental art / edited by Jeffrey Kastner ; survey by Brian Wallis. London.
(4) Rosalind Krauss in - Hesse, E., Serota, N., Whitechapel Art Gallery, Rijksmuseum Kröller-Müller, & Kestner-Gesellschaft. (1979). Eva Hesse, 1936-1970 : Sculpture / [edited by Nicholas Serota]. London
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"...every universe is concentrated in a nucleus, a spore, a dynamized center. And this centre is powerful, because it is an imagined center. One step further into the world of images offered us by Pieyre de Mandiargues, and we see the center that imagines; then we can read the landscape in the glass nucleus. We no longer look at it while looking through it. This nucleizing nucleus is a world in itself. The miniature deploys to the dimensions of a universe. Once more, large is contained in small.”
Gaston Bachelard - Miniature - The Poetics of Space
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