Broken Circle and Spiral Hill: having entropy the Dutch way
“This is a major work, I want to have good reproductions in magazines. I want the piece to remain forever. Please help!”
Robert Smithson, Broken Circle Emmen (1971 )
Graphite on paper
13 x 16 in. (33 x 41 cm)
© Holt/Smithson Foundation / Licensed by Artists Rights Society, New York
Robert Smithson, Broken Circle Emmen (1971 )
Graphite on paper
13 x 16 in. (33 x 41 cm)
© Holt/Smithson Foundation / Licensed by Artists Rights Society, New York
Even with its minimal notes and measurements, this preliminary sketch foretells the audacious undertaking of Broken Circle/Spiral Hill. Located in a sand quarry in remote northeastern Netherlands, Broken Circle/Spiral Hill required considerable excavation and a reconstruction of the existing shoreline. Smithson revered the remote, often selecting mundane, forgotten places as the canvas for lofty visions. In the drawing, the necessary implementation of heavy machinery contrasts the surreal stillness of Smithson’s design.
“This is a major work, I want to have good reproductions in magazines. I want the piece to remain forever. Please help!”