Land Art: Pocket Size (Sculptors)

LAND ART: POCKET GUIDE A fully illustrated pocket guide to land and environmental art. For the land artist, the whole planet is an artist"s studio. The land artist ranges over the whole globe. A desert, a beach, a field, a forest becomes a studio, a place of creative activity. This means the very texture and colour and shape and dampness and springiness and strength and size of moss, for instance. Or a stone. Or a crevice in a rock formation. The way the light falls on a patch of grass, the little bits of dead, yellowish grass on top of the newer, green grass. Pine cones, closed-up. Flowers turning sunward in the late afternoon. These are the things land artists deal with in making art. These are the actualities that artists employ when they create artworks. ? This new book explores all of the major land, environmental and earthwork artists of the past 40 years, including James Turrell and his vast volcano site • Hans Haacke"s Conceptual art • Michael Heizer"s Mid-West earthworks • Robert Smithson and his giant spiral, entropic earthworks • Christo"s wrapped buildings and islands, • Robert Morris"s environments • Walter de Maria"s Romantic Lightning Field • David Nash"s stoves, stones, trees and North Wales environments • Hamish Fulton"s walks and words • Dennis Oppenheim"s concentric snow circles • Richard Long and his art of walking • Andy Goldsworthy"s natural, spontaneous, eco-friendly sculptures • Alice Aycock"s mysterious underground mazes • Mary Miss"s sunken pools and pavilions • Wolfgang Laib"s delicate, luminous pollen spreads • Nancy Holt and her observation sculptures • and the enigmatic floor sculptures of Carl Andre. Here are towers, stars, stones, pools, tunnels, pipes,maps, chasms, ladders, mounds, scars, mirrors, cones, furrows, mazes, circles, hills and gardens. ?