Verlag:
University Presses Marketing [distributor], Bristol
;
University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis, Minn
Edward Casey describes the ways in which artists of the past half century have incorporated ingenious mapping techniques into their artworks. Casey follows Robert Smithson's legacy in the works of Sandy Gellis, Margot McLean, and Michelle Stuart. He...
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Universitäts- und Landesbibliothek Sachsen-Anhalt / Zentrale
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Edward Casey describes the ways in which artists of the past half century have incorporated ingenious mapping techniques into their artworks. Casey follows Robert Smithson's legacy in the works of Sandy Gellis, Margot McLean, and Michelle Stuart. He also explores the visions of the earth found in the abstract paintings of Richard Diebenkorn, Jasper Johns, Willem de Kooning, Eve Ingalls, and Dan Rice Prologue : mapping it out with/in the Earth -- Mapping with earth works : Robert Smithson on the site -- Memorial mapping of the land : materiality in work of Margot McLean -- Mapping down in space and time : Sandy Gellis collecting traces -- Plotting and charting the path : voyaging to the ends of the Earth with Michelle Stuart -- Concluding reflections to part I -- Getting oriented to the Earth : Eve Ingalls bringing line and paint to bear -- Maps and fields : Jasper Johns and Richard Diebenkorn on icons and the land -- Absorptive versus cartographic mapping : Willem de Kooning on bodies moving in the landscape -- Locating the general in the Earth itself : Dan Rice on biding time in place -- Last thoughts on part II -- Epilogue : wherefore Earth-mapping?