Land Art and changing perspectives

Blog

  • Education

Filming Jan Dibbet's 12 Hours Tide Object with Correction of Perspective, 1969

Filming Jan Dibbet's 12 Hours Tide Object with Correction of Perspective, 1969 Jan Dibbets 6 Hours Tide Object with Correction of Perspective, Maasvlakte beach, 8 February 2009 A year ago this week as part of the Portscapes project, the artist Jan Dibbets had what he called a "second attempt" at his 1969 piece 12 Hours Tide Object with Correction of Perspective; the artist and curators rejected the idea of the event being a recreation. The apparently parallel lines are drawn on the beach and disappear again within the space between two high tides.

The original work became part of the canon of Land Art when it was included in Gerry Schum's 1969  Land Art TV broadcast, alongside pieces by Robert Smithson and Richard Long. For Schum the attraction of Land Art was its liberation of art from the gallery. He was trying to make a TV-based form of art that suited the more democratic half of the 20th century.

In the second attempt the work becomes more obviously about man's relationship to the natural world, partly because Portscapes, which we list as one of the 21 highlights of 2009, was a series of commissions by Latitudes on a piece of land that will disappear as part of the new Dutch industrial port complex Maasvlakte 2. And the piece now seems to emphasise the tidal inequalities of that relationship. Just as Dibbett's illusory parallel lines are seen being washed away by the rising tide, so this beach will soon be gone. That is another perspective shift, of a kind.

Read more about 6 Hours Tide Object... here

Photos: Latitudes, Paloma Polo/SKOR and Freek van Arkel

Be the first to write a comment

0 Comments

Please login to post a comment or reply

Don't have an account? Click here to register.