City (artwork)

Last updated

City
City Art.PNG
USA Nevada location map.svg
Red pog.svg
City
Usa edcp location map.svg
Red pog.svg
City
Artist Michael Heizer
Year1970-2022
MediumSoil, rock, concrete
Movement Land art
Dimensions0.80 km× 2.4 km(0.5 mi× 1.5 mi) [1]
Coordinates 38°01′48″N115°26′10″W / 38.03000°N 115.43611°W / 38.03000; -115.43611
OwnerTriple Aught Foundation
Website www.tripleaughtfoundation.org

City is a land art sculpture by Michael Heizer in Garden Valley, a desert valley in rural Lincoln County in the U.S. state of Nevada. More than a mile long, it is the largest contemporary artwork ever built. [2] [3] It was begun in 1972, took 50 years to complete, and cost an estimated $40 million. [4] [5] City is maintained by the Triple Aught Foundation and opened on September 2, 2022, to limited, reservation-only viewing by a maximum of six visitors per day. [5] [6]

Contents

Concept

Like Heizer's Double Negative (1969), City is designed and executed on a massive scale. Covering a space approximately one and a quarter miles long and more than a quarter of a mile wide (2 km by 0.4 km, roughly the scale of the National Mall), City is one of the largest sculptures ever created. Using local dirt, rock, sand, and concrete as building materials, and assembled with heavy machinery, [7] the work is composed of five phases, each consisting of a number of structures called complexes, with some of the structures reaching a height of 80 feet (24 m).

City attempts to synthesize ancient monuments, minimalism and industrial technology. Heizer's inspiration for the work came while he was visiting Yucatan and studying Chichen Itza. [8]

Management

City was financed by several patrons, including the Dia Art Foundation and Lannan Foundation, with an estimated cost of well over $40 million. [5] Heizer completed the work in 2022 with a team of roughly a dozen after previously anticipating completion by 2010.

City is owned and administered by the nonprofit Triple Aught Foundation with a board including Heizer and leaders from arts organizations. [2] [5] It is open to the public as part of the terms of their conservation agreement. [9] It is open to viewing by online reservation only on a limited number of days, with visitors transported to and from the site. Admission is free to residents of Lincoln, Nye, and White Pine Counties in Nevada and $150 for all others. [5]

Conservation

Garden Valley has been eyed for several major projects in the years since Heizer started working on his sculpture. In the 1970s and early 1980s, the government planned to crisscross the valley and others nearby with railroad tracks that would carry MX missiles to and from hidden silos. The program was vetoed by President Ronald Reagan. [10]

The proposed Yucca Mountain Repository, a U.S. Department of Energy terminal storage facility for spent nuclear reactor and other radioactive waste would have included a new railroad line across Garden Valley, and would have come within its sightline. Heizer reportedly considered burying City if this line was built. [11]

In September 2014, U.S. Senator Harry Reid of Nevada introduced the Garden Valley Withdrawal Act, a bill that would preserve the land around City and protect 805,100 acres of federal land from mineral and energy development. [12] Reid had visited the area around City in 2007, and tried to pass a similar bill in 2010 that would designate part of Garden Valley and nearby Coal Valley as a national conservation area. [12] [10] In early 2015, a group of American museums, including the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Museum of Modern Art, the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, the Walker Art Center, and the Nevada Museum of Art joined together to urge preservation of the area. [13]

In July 2015, the area became part of the newly created Basin and Range National Monument. The national monument designation prevents new railroad or power lines and other development. [14]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">San Bernardino County, California</span> County in southern California, United States

San Bernardino County, officially the County of San Bernardino, is a county located in the southern portion of the U.S. state of California, and is located within the Inland Empire area. As of the 2020 U.S. Census, the population was 2,181,654, making it the fifth-most populous county in California and the 14th-most populous in the United States. The county seat is San Bernardino.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Southwestern United States</span> Geographical region of the United States

The Southwestern United States, also known as the American Southwest or simply the Southwest, is a geographic and cultural region of the United States that includes Arizona and New Mexico, along with adjacent portions of California, Colorado, Nevada, Oklahoma, Texas, and Utah. The largest cities by metropolitan area are Phoenix, Las Vegas, El Paso, Albuquerque, and Tucson. Before 1848, in the historical region of Santa Fe de Nuevo México as well as parts of Alta California and Coahuila y Tejas, settlement was almost non-existent outside of Nuevo México's Pueblos and Spanish or Mexican municipalities. Much of the area had been a part of New Spain and Mexico until the United States acquired the area through the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo in 1848 and the smaller Gadsden Purchase in 1854.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Land art</span> Art movement of the 1960s and 1970s

Land art, variously known as Earth art, environmental art, and Earthworks, is an art movement that emerged in the 1960s and 1970s, largely associated with Great Britain and the United States but that also includes examples from many countries. As a trend, "land art" expanded boundaries of art by the materials used and the siting of the works. The materials used were often the materials of the Earth, including the soil, rocks, vegetation, and water found on-site, and the sites of the works were often distant from population centers. Though sometimes fairly inaccessible, photo documentation was commonly brought back to the urban art gallery.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dia Art Foundation</span> US nonprofit arts foundation

Dia Art Foundation is a nonprofit organization that initiates, supports, presents, and preserves art projects. It was established in 1974 by Philippa de Menil, the daughter of Houston arts patron Dominique de Menil and an heiress to the Schlumberger oil exploration fortune; art dealer Heiner Friedrich, Philippa's husband; and Helen Winkler, a Houston art historian. Dia provides support to projects "whose nature or scale would preclude other funding sources."

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Michael Heizer</span> American artist associated with Land Art movement

Michael Heizer is an American land artist specializing in large-scale and site-specific sculptures. Working largely outside the confines of the traditional art spaces of galleries and museums, Heizer has redefined sculpture in terms of size, mass, gesture, and process. A pioneer of 20th-century land art or Earthworks movement, he is widely recognized for sculptures and environmental structures made with earth-moving equipment, which he began creating in the American West in 1967. He currently lives and works in Hiko, Nevada, and New York City.

<i>Double Negative</i> (artwork) Land art piece in Nevada by Michael Heizer

Double Negative is a piece of land art located in the Moapa Valley on Mormon Mesa near Overton, Nevada. Double Negative was created in 1969 by artist Michael Heizer, and consists of a trench dug into the earth.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dia Beacon</span> Modern art museum in Beacon, New York, United States

Dia Beacon is the museum for the Dia Art Foundation's collection of art from the 1960s to the present and is one of the 12 locations and sites they manage. The museum, which opened in 2003, is situated near the banks of the Hudson River in Beacon, New York. Dia Beacon's facility, the Riggio Galleries, is a former Nabisco box-printing facility that was renovated by Dia with artist Robert Irwin and architects Alan Koch, Lyn Rice, Galia Solomonoff, and Linda Taalman, then of OpenOffice. Along with Dia's permanent collection, Dia Beacon also presents temporary exhibitions, as well as public programs designed to complement the collection and exhibitions, including monthly Gallery Talks, Merce Cunningham Dance Company Events, Community Free Days for neighboring counties, and an education program that serves area students at all levels. With 160,000 square feet (15,000 m2), it is one of the largest exhibition spaces in the country for modern and contemporary art.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Amargosa Desert</span> Desert in Nevada and California, United States

The Amargosa Desert is located in Nye County in western Nevada, United States, along the California–Nevada border, comprising the northeastern portion of the geographic Amargosa Valley, north of the Ash Meadows National Wildlife Refuge.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Index of Arizona-related articles</span>

The following is an alphabetical list of articles related to the U.S. state of Arizona.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Index of Nevada-related articles</span>

The following is an alphabetical list of articles related to the U.S. State of Nevada.

<i>Aurora</i> (sculpture) Public artwork by Mark di Suvero

Aurora is a public artwork by American artist Mark di Suvero. It is in the collection of the National Gallery of Art and on display at the National Gallery of Art Sculpture Garden in Washington, D.C., United States.

Virginia Dwan was an American art collector, art patron, philanthropist, and founder of the Dwan Light Sanctuary in Montezuma, New Mexico. She was the former owner and executive director of Dwan Gallery, Los Angeles (1959–1967) and Dwan Gallery New York (1965–1971), a contemporary art gallery closely identified with the American movements of Minimalism, Conceptual Art, and Earthworks.

<i>Levitated Mass</i> 2012 sculpture by Michael Heizer

Levitated Mass is a 2012 large-scale public art sculpture by Michael Heizer at Resnick North Lawn at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. The installation consists of a 340-ton boulder sculpture placed above a 456-foot viewing pathway to accommodate 360-degree viewing. The nature, expense and scale of the installation attracted discussion within the public art world, and its notable 106-mile transit from the Jurupa Valley Quarry in Riverside County was widely covered by the media.

Heiner Friedrich is an art dealer and collector of minimal art and conceptual art. Friedrich and his then wife Philippa de Menil, together with Helen Winkler, established the Dia Art Foundation in 1973. Friedrich has exhibited works by Blinky Palermo, Walter De Maria, Donald Judd, La Monte Young, Andy Warhol, Michael Heizer, and Joseph Beuys, among others in his galleries in Germany, but became less interested in short term gallery installations and through Dia began to collect, and support major projects, such as Walter De Maria's The Lightning Field (1977) in New Mexico and purchasing a former military base in Marfa, Texas to enable Donald Judd to create a permanent space for the installation of his large minimal sculptures.

Michael Govan is the director of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Prior to his current position, Govan worked as the director of the Dia Art Foundation in New York City.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Basin and Range National Monument</span> National monument in southeastern Nevada, United States

Basin and Range National Monument is a national monument of the United States spanning approximately 704,000 acres of remote, undeveloped mountains and valleys in Lincoln and Nye counties in southeastern Nevada. It is described as "one of the emptiest spaces in a state famous for its emptiness."

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mormon Mesa</span> Mesa in Clark County, Nevada

Mormon Mesa is a mesa between the Virgin River and the Muddy River in Clark County, southern Nevada.

Lily Stockman is an American painter who lives and works in Los Angeles and Yucca Valley, CA.

References

  1. Sutton, Benjamin (August 19, 2022). "Michael Heizer's City, a vast art project in the Nevada desert 50 years in the making, will finally open to the public". The Art Newspaper. Retrieved August 19, 2022.
  2. 1 2 "Michael Heizer's The City to Open Following Half-Century Wait". www.artforum.com. August 19, 2022. Retrieved August 20, 2022.
  3. Dafoe, Taylor (August 19, 2022). "After More Than 50 Years, Michael Heizer Is Finally Ready to Unveil 'City,' His Life's Work. Here's What It Looks Like". Artnet News. Retrieved August 20, 2022.
  4. Kimmelman, Michael (February 6, 2005). "Art's Last, Lonely Cowboy". New York Times. Retrieved July 11, 2015.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 Kimmelman, Michael; Heisler, Todd; Throop, Noah (August 19, 2022). "It Was a Mystery in the Desert for 50 Years". The New York Times. ISSN   0362-4331 . Retrieved August 19, 2022.
  6. McGuigan, Cathleen; Herzig, Ilana (September 2, 2022). "Michael Heizer's Sprawling Land Art Piece, Called City, Opens Today in Nevada's High Desert". Architectural Record. Retrieved September 5, 2022.
  7. Veltman, Chloe (January 1, 2023). "Immerse yourself in this colossal desert 'City' — but leave the selfie stick at home". NPR News. Retrieved January 1, 2023.
  8. Kimmelman, Michael (December 12, 1999). "A Sculptor's Colossus of the Desert". New York Times. Retrieved July 11, 2015.
  9. "BLM Accepts Conservation Easement Protecting City Sculpture" (Press release). Bureau of Land Management. December 15, 2016.
  10. 1 2 Steve Tetreault and Henry Brean (October 21, 2014), Sen. Reid quietly moves to block development of 800,000 acres in central Nevada Las Vegas Review-Journal .
  11. Knapp, George (March 11, 2004). "Yucca grandstanding neglects real impacts". Las Vegas Mercury. Retrieved July 11, 2015.
  12. 1 2 Helen Stoilas (November 3, 2014), Move to protect Heizer's City from development Archived 2014-11-05 at the Wayback Machine The Art Newspaper .
  13. Burns, Charlotte (March 18, 2015). "Museums unite in campaign to save massive land art project". The Art Newspaper. Retrieved March 19, 2015.
  14. Secretary Jewell Applauds President Obama's Designation of Basin and Range National Monument in Nevada: President's Action Preserves Sweeping Landscapes & Ancient Rock Art, Protects Existing Ranching & Military Uses (press release), United States Department of the Interior (July 10, 2015).