Michael Heizer

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Michael Heizer


Michael Madden Heizer was born on November 4, 1944 in Berkeley, California to Robert Fleming Heizer and Nancy Elizabeth Jenkins. Robert Heizer, who grew up in Lovelock, Nevada, was one of the most prominent anthropologists of his time, teaching for almost thirty years at the University of California, Berkeley and authoring numerous influential books, particularly about Native American culture in the West.

Heizer was exposed to numerous influences during his youth that would later shape his art: not only his father's anthropological field work, which took him to rural California, Nevada, Peru, and Bolivia, but also the work of his maternal grandfather, Olaf P. Jenkins, who was a geologist. Heizer briefly attended the San Francisco Art Institute from 1963–64 but moved to New York in 1966, where he was in contact with a number of prominent artists of the day, including Carl Andre, Dan Flavin, Walter De Maria, Tony Smith, and Frank Stella. Heizer's early works included a number of more conventional abstract paintings and sculptures, but he evidently soon found New York constraining.

With colleague Walter de Maria, Heizer went west in 1967, and created a new genre of land art or earth art, which used the earth as its medium. Far from the cramped studios of New York, and outside the confines of the museum's white walls, his works reached unprecedented size, culminating in what is perhaps his most famous work, Double Negative. He collaborated with many of the early earth artists, even appearing in Robert Smithson's film about Spiral Jetty, perhaps the best-known example of earth art.

In 1972, Heizer began construction on a massive installation known as City in the rural desert of Lincoln County, Nevada. Since then, Heizer has grown increasingly shy of media attention, and has become known as something of a recluse. Nevertheless, he has continued to produce smaller-scale sculptures and paintings, which have been featured in numerous solo exhibitions (most prominently at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles and the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York). His works now appear in museums and public spaces worldwide.

In 1995, Heizer was diagnosed with a neurological disorder known as polyneuropathy, which reduced his ability to use his hands. Despite this, Heizer currently resides with his second wife, Mary Shanahan, near the City site, and continues his work on the project to this day.

http://doublenegative.tarasen.net/ heizer.html

Double Negative
Double Negative

Double Negative, 1969 - 1970

Heizer lives in Nevada, where he continues to work on City, a sculptural complex begun in 1970 currently supported by Dia and Lannan Foundation.


City
City


City
City


Robert Smithson

Jim Turell

zmena paradigmatu

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