An exhibition dedicated to the short life of prolific American artist – widely recognised as one of the most influential artists of the twentieth century – will open at on March 10, 2018.
Robert Smithson: Time Crystals draws together key works of sculpture, film, photography, drawing, prints, and texts, most of them never previously exhibited in Australia.
Best known for his radical land art of the 1960s and early 1970s, the Smithson exhibition will feature artworks loaned from major Australian and international collections.
The Smithsonian Institution’s Archives of American Art in Washington DC will loan items from Robert Smithson’s personal papers and library for the first time in Australia. The largest loan ever from the Archives of American Art will include sketches, preparatory drawings, correspondence, photographs, and handwritten manuscripts.
Exhibition co-curator Dr Amelia Barikin of Õ¬Äе¼º½ said a distinctive aspect of the exhibition was its juxtaposition of key artworks with rarely seen archival material.
“Smithson was a prolific writer and an avid collector of visual material, with many of the items in his collection serving as source material for his projects,” Dr Barikin said.
“As the most expansive presentation of Smithson’s personal papers ever to be publicly exhibited, including a number of important unpublished writings, the exhibition will offer an extraordinary insight into the artist’s methods, processes, connections and influences.”
Co-curator Professor Chris McAuliffe of ANU said Smithson’s art was driven by a playful, labyrinthine imagination and the exhibition aimed to provide a portal into his mind.
“Smithson was inspired by ideas of crystalline geometry and non-biological time. He used the term ‘Time Crystal’ as a metaphor for endlessness, and as a visualisation of static, frozen time,” Professor McAuliffe said.
“Smithson’s extensive collection of archival material will provide a vehicle for us to explore these ideas and how they shaped an art practice that redefined abstraction and challenged art history.”
Õ¬Äе¼º½ Art Museum Director Dr Campbell Gray said the strong support for the project from the and was visionary and would enable an expanded understanding of American art in Australia.
“For an artist who died in 1973 at age 35, Robert Smithson had an unusually powerful influence on contemporary art theory and practice,” Dr Gray said.
Robert Smithson: Time Crystals will show at Õ¬Äе¼º½ Art Museum from March 10 until 8 July 2018 before travelling to exhibition partner, Monash University Museum of Art.
Image details: The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation / Art Resource, NY © Holt-Smithson Foundation/VAGA. Licensed by Viscopy, 2017.
Media: Sonia Uranishi, sonia@soniauranishicommunication.com, +61 409 387 623; Sebastian Moody, s.moody@uq.edu.au, +61 7 3346 8761.