Land Arts Lives Conference in Netherlands to feature Holt/Smithson Foundation Executive Director Lisa Le Feuvre
The international conference Land Art Lives presented by Kunstmuseum M. and Land Art Flevoland will take place on October 3, 2024, in Lelystad in the province of Flevoland in central Netherlands. Holt/Smithson Foundation Executive Director Lisa Le Feuvre is one of the invited speakers and the Netherlands holds special importance for the legacy of Robert Smithson; Broken Circle / Spiral Hill in Emmen, Netherlands, is the only extant earthwork by Smithson outside of the United States.
The conference seeks to ask the following questions:Why is land art particularly relevant today? What are its new manifestations? How do we deal with these often impermanent works of art? And how does land art shed light on the urgent ecological and social issues of today?
Invited speakers at Land Art Lives include Humberto Moro from Dia Art Foundation, Lisa Le Feuvre from Holt/Smithshon Foundation, Britta Peters from Urbane Künste Ruht and Anja Novak from University of Amsterdam. In the afternoon of October 3 parallel working sessions on the future of land art, from political to practical, from historical to policy, from artistic to academic, will take place The day will be chaired by Meta Knol. In addition to the program, there will be ample opportunity to meet and delve further into reading and archival material.
In the lead up to the conference Holt/Smithson Foundation partnered with Land Art Contemporary (Netherlands) and Land Arts of the American West (Texas Tech University) to create the digital program From Dawn till Dusk: An online encounter between two earthworks by Robert Smithson. On September 10 we presented a special livestream conversation between two iconic earthworks by Robert Smithson: Spiral Jetty (1970) and Broken Circle/Spiral Hill (1971). Broadcasting live from first light at Spiral Jetty, located at the Great Salt Lake in the state of Utah, and concluding with last light at Broken Circle/Spiral Hill located in Emmen in Netherlands, the seven-hour livestream view of the two earthworks featured an evolving program highlighting a myriad of voices and viewpoints. A report reflecting on From Dawn till Dusk can be viewed here.
Further information and tickets for the Land Art Lives conference can be found on the Land Art Lives website.
Robert Smithson, Broken Circle / Spiral Hill (1971)
Emmen, The Netherlands
Broken Circle
Water, sand, and boulder
Diameter: 140 ft. (42.6 m); canal: 12 ft. (3.6 m) wide, 10-15 ft. (3-4.5 m) deep
Spiral Hill
Earth, topsoil, sand
Diameter: 75 ft. (22.9 m) at base
© Holt/Smithson Foundation / Licensed by Artists Rights Society, New York