Depreciation | |
---|---|
Artist | Cameron Rowland |
Year | 2018 |
Medium | Restrictive covenant; 1 acre on Edisto Island, South Carolina |
Location | Dia Art Foundation (long-term loan) |
Depreciation is a work of conceptual land art by American artist Cameron Rowland completed in 2018. The work comprises one acre of land in South Carolina on the site of a former slave plantation which had previously, briefly, been given as reparations to formerly enslaved people, along with legal documents relating to the land. Rowland has set several restrictions on the land, rendering it unusable and undevelopable. The artist has also directed viewers not to visit the land, representing the work in exhibitions with legal documents. [1]
Critics and art historians - and the artist - have suggested that the work represents a critique of property in the United States, showcasing the links between real estate, land use, and the history of slavery in America. [1] [2] [3]
Originally created for an exhibition of Rowland's work at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, Depreciation has since been shown in multiple notable group exhibitions at galleries and museums in the United States and internationally. In 2023 the Dia Art Foundation entered into a long-term loan agreement with Rowland to steward the work as part of Dia's constellation of permanent art installations. [1] [4]
Using funding for their exhibition D37 (2018) at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, Rowland purchased one acre of land on the former Maxcy Place slave plantation on Edisto Island, South Carolina. [3] The property had previously been set aside for and briefly settled by newly freed black families as part of Special Field Orders No. 15, also known as the Forty acres and a mule promise, toward the end of the American Civil War. [2] Following the war, President Andrew Johnson subsequently returned the land to its pre-war owners as the American government withdrew many of its commitments to formerly enslaved people. [2]
After purchasing it in 2018, Rowland imposed a series of permanent covenant restrictions on the land, forbidding in perpetuity any use of, improvement to, or development on the property, rendering it financially worthless, as confirmed by a property appraisal. [2] Covenant restrictions in the United States were historically used by white property owners and communities to enforce segregation by excluding black people from buying homes in their neighborhoods. [2] In the text that accompanies the work, Rowland wrote that "As reparation, this covenant asks how land might exist outside of the legal-economic regime of property that was instituted by slavery and colonization." [5] The artist has deemed that the physical land itself is "not for visitation," and the work is represented in exhibitions with framed copies of the deed to the property, its covenant restrictions, and an appraisal report valuing the land at $0. [1]
The property is located at 8060 Maxie Road on Edisto Island, South Carolina. [1]
The land itself is owned by a nonprofit created by Rowland, 8060 Maxie Road, Inc., solely to execute the work. [4] In 2023 the nonprofit entered into a long-term loan agreement with the Dia Art Foundation, making the work one of Dia's constellation of permanent art installations. Unlike the other sites in Dia's collection, the land is still legally owned by Rowland's nonprofit and the work will remain under the nonprofit's ownership in perpetuity. Dia describes its role as "stewarding" the artwork, and the legal documents have been on long-term display at Dia Chelsea since 2023. [4] [1]
Critics and journalists have labeled Dia's stewardship of the work an example of the institution's changing priorities and evolving relationship to the medium of land art, for which Dia is well known as a prominent collector and supporter of the medium. Rowland's work engages with issues of race and slavery, unlike the majority of the institution's permanent artworks which were largely made by white men, and Depreciation is markedly different from well-known land artworks owned by Dia like Spiral Jetty or The Broken Kilometer , in that this work is expressly not for visitation while the previous works have become pilgrimage sites for some in the art world. [1] [4]
Zoé Samudzi wrote in Art in America that Rowland "sought to strip a land asset of its value to prevent further profiteering," further noting that the covenant at the heart of the work "effectively deprives the land of the value derived from forced labor by excising it from the antagonistic real estate market enforcing this anti-Black property relation." [2] Writing in Artforum , critic Marina Vishmidt said that the work was an example of Rowland's "primary media" being "not physical objects but the legal mechanisms that often serve as titles for the work." Vishmidt wrote that Depreciation "added friction to how a piece of land, a fictitious commodity, was able to circulate." [6]
Curator and writer Simon Wu, writing in Momus, said that Depreciation was an extension of "Rowland's critique of property relations [...] to the critique of literal property, i.e., land as capital." Wu suggested that "For Rowland, rerouting the flow of capital is not as important as rethinking our property relations wholesale, even if it means rendering an entire plot of land unusable." [7] Writer and curator Alex Jen labeled the work a "critique of this country's tying upward mobility with white land ownership." Writing in The Brooklyn Rail , Jen argued that "By wresting the power of land valuation HOLC once used and instead using it constructively to wryly co-opt the restrictive covenants that white property owners used to keep blacks from owning their land, Rowland dismantles the idea that property can be a means of reparation." [3]
Curator and art historian Irene Sunwoo, writing in The Avery Review, explained that "While racially restrictive covenants helped to increase property value in white neighborhoods, they conversely facilitated the redlining of areas populated by lower-income minorities," and suggested that "Rowland’s appropriation of the restrictive covenant responds directly to this long history of housing discrimination." [8] Writing in Third Text , the critic Guy Mannes-Abbott referenced a passage by Rowland that said, "the restriction imposed on 8060 Maxie Road’s status as valuable and transactable real estate asserts antagonism to the regime of property as a means of reparation;" Mannes-Abbott wrote that "The regime really refers to the practice of capital abstraction, especially in the form of mortgaging, which used slaves as collateral because they were deemed property across the range referred to above." [9]
This aims to be a complete list of the articles on real estate.
A homeowner association [or homeowners' association (HOA), sometimes referred to as a property owners' association (POA), common interest development (CID), or homeowner community], is a private, legally-incorporated organization that governs a housing community, collects dues, and sets rules for its residents. HOAs are found principally in the United States, Canada, the Philippines, as well as some other countries. They are formed either ipso jure, or by a real estate developer for the purpose of marketing, managing, and selling homes and lots in a residential subdivision.The developer may transfer control of an HOA after selling a predetermined number of lots.
A condominium is an ownership regime in which a building is divided into multiple units that are either each separately owned, or owned in common with exclusive rights of occupation by individual owners. These individual units are surrounded by common areas that are jointly owned and managed by the owners of the units. The term can be applied to the building or complex itself, and is sometimes applied to individual units. The term "condominium" is mostly used in the US and Canada, but similar arrangements are used in many other countries under different names.
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."
Jesse Clyde "J. C." Nichols was an American urban planner and developer of commercial and residential real estate in Kansas City, Missouri.
A covenant, in its most general sense and historical sense, is a solemn promise to engage in or refrain from a specified action. Under historical English common law, a covenant was distinguished from an ordinary contract by the presence of a seal. Because the presence of a seal indicated an unusual solemnity in the promises made in a covenant, the common law would enforce a covenant even in the absence of consideration. In United States contract law, an implied covenant of good faith is presumed.
California Proposition 14 was a November 1964 initiative ballot measure that amended the California state constitution to nullify the 1963 Rumford Fair Housing Act, thereby allowing property sellers, landlords and their agents to openly discriminate on ethnic grounds when selling or letting accommodations, as they had been permitted to before 1963. The proposition became law after receiving support from 65% of voters. In 1966, the California Supreme Court in a 5–2 split decision declared Proposition 14 unconstitutional under the equal protection clause of the United States Constitution. The U.S. Supreme Court affirmed that decision in 1967 in Reitman v. Mulkey.
In real estate business and law, a title search or property title search is the process of examining public records and retrieving documents on the history of a piece of real property to determine and confirm property's legal ownership, and find out what claims or liens are on the property. A title search is also performed when an owner wishes to sell mortgage property and the bank requires the owner to insure this transaction.
In contract law, a non-compete clause, restrictive covenant, or covenant not to compete (CNC), is a clause under which one party agrees not to enter into or start a similar profession or trade in competition against another party. In the labor market, these agreements prevent workers from freely moving across employers, and weaken the bargaining leverage of workers.
Woodside Park is a neighborhood located in Silver Spring, Maryland, in the United States.
Loren Miller was an American journalist, civil rights activist, attorney, and judge. Miller was appointed to the Los Angeles County Superior Court by governor Edmund G. "Pat" Brown in 1964 and served until his death in 1967. Miller was a specialist in housing discrimination, whose involvement in the early stages of the Civil Rights Movement earned him a reputation as a tenacious fighter for equal housing opportunities for minorities. Miller argued some of the most historic civil rights cases ever heard before the Supreme Court of the United States. He was chief counsel before the court in the 1948 decision that led to the outlawing of racial restrictive covenants, Shelley v. Kraemer.
Beach O' Pines is a private gated community located on the shores of Lake Huron in Lambton County, Ontario, Canada. It is located immediately outside of the community of Grand Bend, Ontario, and is bordered to the northwest by Lake Huron, the southwest by the Pinery Provincial Park, the northeast by the subdivision of Southcott Pines, and the southeast by the Old Ausable Channel, Highway #21, and the subdivision of Huron Woods.
Shelley v. Kraemer, 334 U.S. 1 (1948), is a landmark United States Supreme Court case that held that racially restrictive housing covenants cannot legally be enforced.
Reparations are broadly understood as compensation given for an abuse or injury. The colloquial meaning of reparations has changed substantively over the last century. In the early 1900s, reparations were interstate exchanges that were punitive mechanisms determined by treaty and paid by the surrendering side of a conflict, such as the World War I reparations paid by Germany and its allies. Reparations are now understood as not only war damages but also compensation and other measures provided to victims of severe human rights violations by the parties responsible. The right of the victim of an injury to receive reparations and the duty of the part responsible to provide them has been secured by the United Nations.
Artists Space is a non-profit art gallery and arts organization first established at 155 Wooster Street in SoHo, Manhattan, New York City. Founded in 1972 by Irving Sandler and Trudie Grace and funded by the New York State Council on the Arts (NYSCA), Artists Space provided an alternative support structure for young, emerging artists, separate from the museum and commercial gallery system. Artists Space has historically been engaged in critical dialogues surrounding institutional critique, racism, the AIDS crisis, and Occupy Wall Street. As of 2019, Artists Space is located at 11 Cortlandt Alley in the Financial District of Manhattan.
The Housing Act 1985 is an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. The act introduced laws relating to the succession of Council Houses. It also facilitated the transfer of council housing to not-for-profit housing associations.
Corrigan v. Buckley, 271 U.S. 323 (1926), was a US Supreme Court case in 1926 that ruled that the racially-restrictive covenant of multiple residents on S Street NW, between 18th Street and New Hampshire Avenue, in Washington, DC, was a legally-binding document that made the selling of a house to a black family a void contract. This ruling set the precedent upholding racially restrictive covenants in Washington; soon after this ruling, racially restrictive covenants flourished around the nation. Subsequently, in Shelley v. Kraemer (1948) the court reconsidered such covenants and found that racially restrictive covenants are unenforceable.
Cameron Rowland is an American conceptual artist whose work has been exhibited internationally and acclaimed for its structural analytic approach to addressing issues of American slavery, mass incarceration, and reparations. Rowland graduated from Wesleyan University in 2011 and they were awarded the MacArthur Fellowship in 2019 after several solo and group exhibitions at venues including the Museum of Modern Art, Whitney Museum of American Art, Kunsthal Aarhus, and La Biennale de Montreal. Rowland is noted for their distinct method of loaning some works to collectors and institutions rather than selling them outright, an approach meant to mirror the experience of low-income people shopping at rent-to-own stores like Rent-A-Center and disrupt the traditional value structure in the contemporary art market.
155 Mercer Street is a former firemen's hall, now commercial building, located on Mercer Street, in the SoHo neighborhood of New York City. Built in 1855, the building featured an ornate façade designed by Field & Correja which was largely removed over a series of changes between 1893 and the mid-1970s. The last fire company left the building in 1974.