Article 5GHB0 ‘Female artists were invisible’: critics didn’t dismiss Nancy Holt’s land art – they didn’t mention it at all

‘Female artists were invisible’: critics didn’t dismiss Nancy Holt’s land art – they didn’t mention it at all

by
Dale Berning Sawa
from World news | The Guardian on (#5GHB0)

Holt made mesmerising works that filtered stars and vanished in the desert heat. But land art was seen as a male preserve. A new exhibition redresses the balance

The story of land art is generally believed to be a tale of white men in weathered denim descending on what they thought of as the empty canvas of the American west in the 1960s with bulldozers and big ideas to make their work. But what of the women who were also making their mark? Today, land art appears as an almost perfect distillation of the art world's history of male privilege, with its conviction that man is entitled to space to roam, to make his mark," critic Megan O'Grady wrote in 2018. It is one of the contemporary art movements most urgently in need of reconsideration."

A forthcoming exhibition at Lismore Castle in County Waterford, centred on the work of the late Nancy Holt, hopes to redress that balance. The Irish venue launches its post-lockdown programming with Light and Language, a group show looking at her legacy in contemporary art as a central member of the land art and conceptual movements. It is an uncommon opportunity to see a sizeable group of Holt works, many of which haven't been exhibited in decades. There is a large-scale installation, several video and sound works, photography, drawing and a scattering of her concrete poems". The most recognisable piece of Holt's is a mesmerising earthwork entitled Sun Tunnels - four cylindrical, concrete forms, large enough to walk through, installed in the desert in Utah.

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