Regina Gouger Miller Gallery, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania, October 2005
Groundworks: Environmental
Collaboration in Contemporary Art
We live in an era of unprecedented environmental transformation.
Unfortunately the vast preponderance of this change is negative: from the
relentless decimation of animal species to the ravages of a global warming so
dire that even the Pentagon has admitted it as a real threat. It is not
surprising, then, that artists have sought to address ecological concerns in
their work. Artists throughout the modern period have turned to natural themes
(often through the rhetoric of landscape), and have also claimed a special
affinity with the world of nature. What is more unusual in recent art practice
is that this essentially representational relationship to nature has been
supplemented by a commitment to direct intervention. Building on the tradition
established by earth art pioneers such as Helen and Newton Harrison, Agnes
Dennis, and Alan Sonfist, artists over the past decade have developed a
remarkable range of projects that offer concrete solutions to specific
ecological problems ranging from brownfield reclamation to the survival of
family farms. Groundworks: Environmental Collaborations in Contemporary Art will provide an overview of recent projects,
bringing more established practitioners into conversation with emerging groups
in the United States, England, Austria, Japan and Argentina. This generational
dialogue will overlay a set of geographic exchanges, in which artists working
in western Pennsylvania will be exhibited in the context of a growing national
and international environmental art movement. The exhibition is being supported
by the Studio for Creative Inquiry at Carnegie Mellon University. It will also
feature documentation from a series of long-term residency projects in which
national and regional artists will work collaboratively with the residents of
communities and neighborhoods in the Monongahela river valley.
Over the last two decades the field of
environmental art practice has become increasingly diverse, with works ranging
from traditional sculpture and public art to performance and new media. Groundworks will focus specifically on two, often
interrelated, areas of current practice. First, we will present works that are
generated through a collaborative or participatory approach in which the
inhabitants of specific sites are actively involved in a process of physical
and creative transformation. Drawing inspiration from the history of
performance art as well as the traditions of radical planning, these projects
seek to replace the mastery of the conventional planner or artist, with an
openness to the specific realities of site and subjectivity embodied in a given
environment. We will also focus on projects that seek to directly engage the
mechanisms of policy and planning that govern the use of a given eco-system.
These may include professional planning agencies, government officials,
activist organizations and NGOs. In each area of work the artist helps to craft
an interface: between the contingencies of place and the abstractions of space,
between the needs of inhabitants and the survival of complex eco-systems, and between the agency of
man and the autonomy of nature. In many cases these two tendencies,
collaborative process and direct political engagement, are combined in a single
work.
This is an exhibition about the environment,
but it is also an exhibition that explores the boundaries of new art practices.
The projects on display reflect back critically on normative assumptions about
artÑwhat form it might take, what effects it might haveÑas much as they do on
our perceptions of the natural environment. They embody a relationship to
nature not as something to be mastered, transformed, or turned to our
advantage, but as an interlocutor and agent speaking to us in a language we are
not always equipped to understand. At the same time, they suggest a critical relationship
to notions of authorship, expressivity and immanence in art practice, embracing
instead the uncertainty of collaborative interaction. There is, in fact, an
underlying synchronicity between this collaborative approach (in which the work
of art is less an a priori construct than an open-ended process of exchange)
and the ethical relationship to the land that is implicit throughout these
works. These questions will be explored in an accompanying catalog, with essays
by leading figures in the fields of art and architectural history and
environmental philosophy. Groundworks will feature project documentation, images, drawings, wall texts, diagrams
and maps, transforming the exhibition space into a visually rich Chautauqua; a
site for dialogue over new developments in art and environmental activism.
Grant Kester, University of California, San Diego 2005