Maya Lin's "Wave Field" | The New York Times
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 1 окт 2024
- The artist discusses her new projects, including her new installation at the Storm King Art Center.
Subscribe to the Times Video newsletter for free and get a handpicked selection of the best videos from The New York Times every week: bit.ly/timesvid...
Subscribe on RUclips: bit.ly/U8Ys7n
Watch more videos at: nytimes.com/video
---------------------------------------------------------------
Want more from The New York Times?
Twitter: / nytvideo
Facebook: / nytimes
Google+: plus.google.co...
Whether it's reporting on conflicts abroad and political divisions at home, or covering the latest style trends and scientific developments, New York Times video journalists provide a revealing and unforgettable view of the world. It's all the news that's fit to watch. On RUclips.
Maya Lin's "Wave Field" - NYTimes.com/video
/ thenewyorktimes
Maya is an incredible artist who knows how to work with scale. I always love to see what she's working on.
She's from a family that had a generation of influential architects back in China.
Feimi J her auntie was huge in china
love you're passion, inspirational Maya
"These dunes would simply need to be inactive enough to allow grass to grow."
Yes ... That's exactly what the Nebraska Sand Hills are: Largely inactive sand dunes which were last fully active during the waning stages of the Pleistocene. I drove through them last back in summer 1995. Looking at Lin's work, I was immediately reminded of them.
pretty cool, but you can tell that she didn't ever had to mow a lawn
"how natural did the piece seem?"
Well, shoot. It's spiral form jutting out from a shoreline. It's entirely UNnatural!
"Can you still see any evidence for the work that was needed to make Spiral Jetty ... ?"
The whole area around it was something of an industrial waste site ... there is abandoned oil rig infrastructure not far from the jetty itself ... so it was far from a pristine site to begin with ... which, if I remember right, was one reason Smithson chose the site.
" ... it is miles away from something like Robert Smithson's "Spiral Jetty" "
Smithson was the first "Earth artist" I discovered way back when. I visited the Spiral Jetty about twelve years ago. It was somewhat above lake level at that time, but not fully. A very strange sight (and site) indeed. Have you been there?
At the time of my visit, there was little if any signage directing you to the site. I remember visiting Golden Spike Nat. Monument (north of Spiral Jetty site) and receiving a handout from the staff containing directions. It's a very remote area. I also remember abandoned house trailers out near SJ, around which I poked. I also remember that the hillslope above the shoreline out from which SJ is built is covered with tufa- or caliche-encrusted basalt boulders.
Really interesting work. I'm a geomorphologist, and I find earthwork art real intriguing. Lin's "wave" works can also be seen as sand dune forms, albeit, with a cover of grasses; kind of like the Nebraska Sand Hills are naturally. I wonder if the Sand Hills were an inspiration to her?
I have not Spiral Jetty, but I would like to. I have been in the area once, but at that time, I had no idea who Robert Smithson was. Much hoopla was made about the piece in a number of my art classes.
a question on your experience-- how natural did the piece seem? Can you still see any evidence for the work that was needed to make Spiral Jetty or have the years worn it down to the point at which it seems a more natural addition to the landscape?
I thought of the dune form as well. The structure here seems so much closer to it, although this could be due to my own associations with sand dunes. These dunes would simply need to be inactive enough to allow grass to grow.
I'm a geology/art double major, so land art, and the current movement towards environmentally-aware art have caught my eye. This falls into the former category, but it is miles away from something like Robert Smithson's "Spiral Jetty"
Also ... I remember that the boulders forming SJ have become encrusted with salt since its construction.
i like her rivers and bodies of water