Robert Smithson and Lawrence Weiner at ADAA The Art Show New York

Marian Goodman Gallery are currently exhibiting works by Robert Smithson and Lawrence Weiner in the ADAA Art Show New York at the Park Avenue Armory.

Lawrence Weiner (b. 1942) and Robert Smithson (b. 1938-d.1973) are two artists who consistently have rethought the limits of art, asking questions that are profoundly urgent for our times. At The Art Show, Marian Goodman is proud to present a unique pairing of these two artists who have built the ground from which contemporary art has grown.

From his landmark earthworks to his quasi-minimalist sculptures, Nonsites, writings, proposals, collages, detailed drawings and engagement with entropy, Smithson explored the conceptual and physical boundaries of landscape. Since the 1960s Weiner has used language as a sculptural medium, underlining the fundamental importance of encounter, time, and space in art and demonstrating its power to reframe perception and reveal power structures. Formed from language, his structures consisting of text, and sometimes accompanied by gestures and punctuation marks, have been exhibited around the world and interpreted into numerous languages.

Both artists share an interest in the imponderables of time, space, and language. In addition to celebrating the mutual respect these two pioneer artists had for one another, this special presentation focuses on their common interest in the sea.

For Smithson, islands were speculative sites showing the constantly changing surface of our planet and the limits of human knowledge. Smithson’s imagined islands sit alongside a work suggested by Weiner: TAR + HIGH WATER (+) (-) TAR + LOW WATER, 1994 (presented here in English and Flemish) and points to Smithson’s only extant earthwork in Europe, located in the Netherlands, Broken Circle/Spiral Hill (1971), which celebrates its 50th anniversary this year. In addition, Smithson was fascinated by the reclaimed nature of the Dutch landscape—as shown in his island meanders drawings, and Weiner, who has kept a houseboat in Amsterdam for decades and exhibited widely in the Netherlands, was drawn to the “productive point of unrest” he saw as typifying that city.

Find Smithson and Weiner's work at Marian Goodman Gallery's booth B1 through November 7, 2021.

Robert Smithson, Forking Island (1971)

Paint and marker on mirror

12 x 12 in. (30.5 x 30.5 cm)
 

© Holt/Smithson Foundation, licensed by Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

Archived News

Nancy Holt: Circles of Light at Gropius Bau, Berlin

Holt/Smithson Foundation and Gropius Bau are pleased to announce the most comprehensive presentation of Nancy Holt in Germany to date. Taking a journey through Holt’s output, starting with her first artwork made in 1966, Circles of Light expands over the Gropius Bau’s ground floor and atrium. Paying attention to Holt’s experimental approach to the interplay between the immaterial and the material, this exhibition underscores the singularity of Holt’s oeuvre.

Chapter Six of Tuesday Texts

We are happy to announce that throughout January we will be publishing a sixth chapter of our Tuesday Text Series as part of our ongoing Scholarly Text Program, which invites thinkers to focus on a single artwork by Holt and/or Smithson. This chapter of Tuesday Texts will focus on artworks by Robert Smithson.

Every Tuesday we will publish a text to our website that includes images selected by the author, a short bibliography, citation reference, and endnotes pointing to the author’s references.