Landscape into Eco Art: Articulations of Nature Since the ’60s

Author:   Mark Cheetham (Continuing Senior Fellow)
Publisher:   Pennsylvania State University Press
ISBN:  

9780271080048


Pages:   256
Publication Date:   06 February 2019
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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Landscape into Eco Art: Articulations of Nature Since the ’60s


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Author:   Mark Cheetham (Continuing Senior Fellow)
Publisher:   Pennsylvania State University Press
Imprint:   Pennsylvania State University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 17.80cm , Height: 25.40cm , Length: 25.40cm
Weight:   0.726kg
ISBN:  

9780271080048


ISBN 10:   0271080043
Pages:   256
Publication Date:   06 February 2019
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

Contents List of Illustrations Acknowledgments 1. Manipulated Landscapes 2. Beyond Suspicion: Why (Not) Landscape? 3. Remote Control: Siting Land Art and Eco Art 4. Contracted Fields: “Nature” in the Art Museum 5. Bordering the Ubiquitous: The Art of Local and Global Ecologies Notes Bibliography Index

Reviews

A major contribution to the burgeoning discussion of ecology in the history of art, Landscape into Eco Art effectively cuts across a number of long-standing cul-de-sacs in late modern art scholarship by distilling debates from a truly expansive range of voices. Mark Cheetham's claims about the persistence of landscape in the production and analysis of contemporary art absorbs cutting-edge thinking about climate change while working through legacies of environmental art in both Europe and North America. -James Nisbet, author of Ecologies, Environments, and Energy Systems in Art of the 1960s and 1970s Landscape into Eco Art offers a much-needed art history of the Anthropocene. Landscape art is not merely a precursor to contemporary practices, however. Cheetham's `preposterous' interpretive framing of eco art mobilizes fresh understandings of the landscape tradition in relation to Western industrialization. The case studies challenge the temptation to confine ecology to a political discourse. Instead, aesthetic history is borne out in a rethinking of how ethical dilemmas spark a new artistic modus operandi. A rich and compelling read. -Amanda Boetzkes, author of The Ethics of Earth Art Summarizing what is now a vast literature on environmentally engaged art, Mark Cheetham usefully historicizes landscape painting, land art, and eco art in Western traditions-and polemicizes against severing any of these artistic practices from landscape as such. Rather than make excuses for the centuries-old genre of landscape, Cheetham wants to use its encumbrances to reveal investments from the past. An essential contribution to urgent issues of the Anthropocene. -Caroline A. Jones, author of Machine in the Studio: Constructing the Postwar American Artist This engaging book is recommended highly for academic libraries that support studio art, art history, environmental studies, or landscape architecture programs. -Heather Saunders, ARLIS/NA Reviews Not the least of the virtues of Landscape into Eco Art is that it offers a well-developed sketch of one convincing, conceptually consistent way of understanding our present situation. -David Carrier, Brooklyn Rail


A major contribution to the burgeoning discussion of ecology in the history of art, Landscape into Eco Art effectively cuts across a number of long-standing cul-de-sacs in late modern art scholarship by distilling debates from a truly expansive range of voices. Mark Cheetham's claims about the persistence of landscape in the production and analysis of contemporary art absorbs cutting-edge thinking about climate change while working through legacies of environmental art in both Europe and North America. --James Nisbet, author of Ecologies, Environments, and Energy Systems in Art of the 1960s and 1970s Landscape into Eco Art offers a much-needed art history of the Anthropocene. Landscape art is not merely a precursor to contemporary practices, however. Cheetham's 'preposterous' interpretive framing of eco art mobilizes fresh understandings of the landscape tradition in relation to Western industrialization. The case studies challenge the temptation to confine ecology to a political discourse. Instead, aesthetic history is borne out in a rethinking of how ethical dilemmas spark a new artistic modus operandi. A rich and compelling read. --Amanda Boetzkes, author of The Ethics of Earth Art This engaging book is recommended highly for academic libraries that support studio art, art history, environmental studies, or landscape architecture programs. --Heather Saunders, ARLIS/NA Reviews Not the least of the virtues of Landscape into Eco Art is that it offers a well-developed sketch of one convincing, conceptually consistent way of understanding our present situation. --David Carrier, Brooklyn Rail Summarizing what is now a vast literature on environmentally engaged art, Mark Cheetham usefully historicizes landscape painting, land art, and eco art in Western traditions--and polemicizes against severing any of these artistic practices from landscape as such. Rather than make excuses for the centuries-old genre of landscape, Cheetham wants to use its encumbrances to reveal investments from the past. An essential contribution to urgent issues of the Anthropocene. --Caroline A. Jones, author of Machine in the Studio: Constructing the Postwar American Artist


Landscape into Eco Art is an engaging and theoretical read, which systematically analyses contemporary eco art. It draws on key examples of the genre while reflecting on former land art legacies and paying homage to the forgotten art of landscape depiction. Ultimately, Cheetham expands our understanding of contemporary eco art by taking its heritage-along with its current condition-into consideration. -Selina Oakes, Aesthetica Magazine A major contribution to the burgeoning discussion of ecology in the history of art, Landscape into Eco Art effectively cuts across a number of long-standing cul-de-sacs in late modern art scholarship by distilling debates from a truly expansive range of voices. Mark Cheetham's claims about the persistence of landscape in the production and analysis of contemporary art absorbs cutting-edge thinking about climate change while working through legacies of environmental art in both Europe and North America. -James Nisbet, author of Ecologies, Environments, and Energy Systems in Art of the 1960s and 1970s Landscape into Eco Art offers a much-needed art history of the Anthropocene. Landscape art is not merely a precursor to contemporary practices, however. Cheetham's 'preposterous' interpretive framing of eco art mobilizes fresh understandings of the landscape tradition in relation to Western industrialization. The case studies challenge the temptation to confine ecology to a political discourse. Instead, aesthetic history is borne out in a rethinking of how ethical dilemmas spark a new artistic modus operandi. A rich and compelling read. -Amanda Boetzkes, author of The Ethics of Earth Art Summarizing what is now a vast literature on environmentally engaged art, Mark Cheetham usefully historicizes landscape painting, land art, and eco art in Western traditions-and polemicizes against severing any of these artistic practices from landscape as such. Rather than make excuses for the centuries-old genre of landscape, Cheetham wants to use its encumbrances to reveal investments from the past. An essential contribution to urgent issues of the Anthropocene. -Caroline A. Jones, author of Machine in the Studio: Constructing the Postwar American Artist This engaging book is recommended highly for academic libraries that support studio art, art history, environmental studies, or landscape architecture programs. -Heather Saunders, ARLIS/NA Reviews For those seeking a foothold in contemporary conversations around our aesthetic relation to the land, Landscape into Eco Art is filled with useful strategies for engaging the conceptual, scientific, and affective components of our landscape experience. -Melissa S. Ragain, Landscape Architecture Magazine Not the least of the virtues of Landscape into Eco Art is that it offers a well-developed sketch of one convincing, conceptually consistent way of understanding our present situation. -David Carrier, Brooklyn Rail


A major contribution to the burgeoning discussion of ecology in the history of art, Landscape into Eco Art effectively cuts across a number of long-standing cul-de-sacs in late modern art scholarship by distilling debates from a truly expansive range of voices. Mark Cheetham's claims about the persistence of landscape in the production and analysis of contemporary art absorbs cutting-edge thinking about climate change while working through legacies of environmental art in both Europe and North America. --James Nisbet, author of Ecologies, Environments, and Energy Systems in Art of the 1960s and 1970s Landscape into Eco Art offers a much-needed art history of the Anthropocene. Landscape art is not merely a precursor to contemporary practices, however. Cheetham's 'preposterous' interpretive framing of eco art mobilizes fresh understandings of the landscape tradition in relation to Western industrialization. The case studies challenge the temptation to confine ecology to a political discourse. Instead, aesthetic history is borne out in a rethinking of how ethical dilemmas spark a new artistic modus operandi. A rich and compelling read. --Amanda Boetzkes, author of The Ethics of Earth Art Summarizing what is now a vast literature on environmentally engaged art, Mark Cheetham usefully historicizes landscape painting, land art, and eco art in Western traditions--and polemicizes against severing any of these artistic practices from landscape as such. Rather than make excuses for the centuries-old genre of landscape, Cheetham wants to use its encumbrances to reveal investments from the past. An essential contribution to urgent issues of the Anthropocene. --Caroline A. Jones, author of Machine in the Studio: Constructing the Postwar American Artist This engaging book is recommended highly for academic libraries that support studio art, art history, environmental studies, or landscape architecture programs. --Heather Saunders, ARLIS/NA Reviews Not the least of the virtues of Landscape into Eco Art is that it offers a well-developed sketch of one convincing, conceptually consistent way of understanding our present situation. --David Carrier, Brooklyn Rail


Summarizing what is now a vast literature on environmentally engaged art, Mark Cheetham usefully historicizes landscape painting, land art, and eco art in Western traditions--and polemicizes against severing any of these artistic practices from landscape as such. Rather than make excuses for the centuries-old genre of landscape, Cheetham wants to use its encumbrances to reveal investments from the past. An essential contribution to urgent issues of the Anthropocene. --Caroline A. Jones, author of Machine in the Studio: Constructing the Postwar American Artist A major contribution to the burgeoning discussion of ecology in the history of art, Landscape into Eco Art effectively cuts across a number of long-standing cul-de-sacs in late modern art scholarship by distilling debates from a truly expansive range of voices. Mark Cheetham's claims about the persistence of landscape in the production and analysis of contemporary art absorbs cutting-edge thinking about climate change while working through legacies of environmental art in both Europe and North America. --James Nisbet, author of Ecologies, Environments, and Energy Systems in Art of the 1960s and 1970s Landscape into Eco Art offers a much-needed art history of the Anthropocene. Landscape art is not merely a precursor to contemporary practices, however. Cheetham's 'preposterous' interpretive framing of eco art mobilizes fresh understandings of the landscape tradition in relation to Western industrialization. The case studies challenge the temptation to confine ecology to a political discourse. Instead, aesthetic history is borne out in a rethinking of how ethical dilemmas spark a new artistic modus operandi. A rich and compelling read. --Amanda Boetzkes, author of The Ethics of Earth Art This engaging book is recommended highly for academic libraries that support studio art, art history, environmental studies, or landscape architecture programs. --Heather Saunders, ARLIS/NA Reviews Not the least of the virtues of Landscape into Eco Art is that it offers a well-developed sketch of one convincing, conceptually consistent way of understanding our present situation. --David Carrier, Brooklyn Rail


Author Information

Mark A. Cheetham is Professor of Art History at the University of Toronto. His most recent books include Abstract Art Against Autonomy: Infection, Resistance, and Cure Since the 60s and Artwriting, Nation, and Cosmopolitanism in Britain: The “Englishness” of English Art Theory since the Eighteenth Century.

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