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"Down the Garden Path: The Artist's Garden After Modernism"; Queens Museum of Art.


Curator Valerie Smith Valerie Smith is a left wing social activist who lobbies against violent pornography, violent rap music, and other misogynist content in Canadian media. She is best known for trying to prevent Eminem from entering Canada for a concert in October 2000 because of his misogynist  seemed to have chosen works for "Down the Garden Path: The Artist's Garden After Modernism" not simply to illustrate a theme, but to enrich it. Fleshing out a well-installed selection of actual works, photographic documentation, and plans for unrealized projects with five new artists' gardens commissioned for Flushing Meadows Corona Corona, city, United States
Corona (kərō`nə), city (1990 pop. 76,095), Riverside co., S Calif.; inc. 1896. The city developed as a primary citrus fruit producer and shipping center. There is also light manufacturing.
 Park, Smith's exhibition proposed the garden as a model for human influence on the environment, while positioning it as a lens through which to view the diversification of artistic strategies since the 1960s.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Works offering ecology as the foundation for a better way of life were here given a complex genealogy genealogy (jē'nēŏl`əjē, –ăl`–, jĕ–), the study of family lineage. Genealogies have existed since ancient times. . Represented by photographs and sketches, Alan Sonfist's Time Landscape, initiated in 1965 and realized in 1978, is a slice of Manhattan as the Dutch might have found it, restaged and still thriving at the corner of West Houston and LaGuardia Place. It's a mass of untended undergrowth, an antilandscape wholly beyond the Romantic notion of the cultivated wild. More recent works of public art documented or realized at or near the Queens Museum participate in the genre's recent trend toward blending radical idealism and aesthetics with the concerns of other disciplines and communities.

Mel Chin Mel Chin, b. 1951 Houston, Texas is a conceptual visual artist. Motivated largely by political, cultural, and social circumstances, Chin works in a variety of art mediums to calculate meaning in modern life.  and Rufus Chaney's Revival Field, 1991-93, documented here in photographs, is a sculpture in the form of a plot of toxic-metal-absorbing vegetation planted at Pig's Eye Landfill in Saint Paul, Minnesota
For an overview of the Twin Cities metropolitan area, see Minneapolis-Saint Paul.
Saint Paul is the capital and the second most populous city of the U.S. state of Minnesota and is the county seat of Ramsey County.
. Closer to home were Nils Norman's The Gerard Winstanley Radical Gardening Space Reclamation Mobile Field Center and Weather Station Prototype, 1999, a bicycle-drawn minicaravan containing a library, a photocopier photocopier

Device for producing copies of text or graphic material by the use of light, heat, chemicals, or electrostatic charge. Most modern copiers use a method called xerography.
, and weather-detection instruments, which was parked on the museum's first floor, and Lonnie Graham's Jardines Gemelos de las Americas (Twin Gardens of the Americas), 2005, thriving just outside the building's entrance. One of many multifunctional gardens initiated by Graham and maintained collaboratively by members of a given community, the ongoing social sculpture gives back in proportion to what it receives.

Then there's the garden as an expression of a more-idiosyncratic vision. Gordon Matta-Clark's unrealized Islands Parked on the Hudson, 1970-71 (represented here by a sketch), and Acconci Studio's Personal Island, 1992, a circle of land that detaches with you as you row your boat out into a lake (a project documented here by photographs), hint at the possibility of escape to an offshore heaven or hell. Represented here via photographs, tools, journals, and his movie The Garden (1990), filmmaker Derek Jarman's rocks-and-driftwood plot, built to surround his cottage on the unfriendly coastline of Dungeness, England, embodies a life of lonely protest. Confronting visitors to the second floor was The Grass-Eater, 1997-2005, Thierry de Cordier's tumor tumor: see neoplasm.  as lawn ornament--a five-foot-high rump of wood, rubber, blankets, and half a zinc bathtub, built by the artist in his rural Belgian garden and installed alongside wall texts racked with self-doubt.

Of the works that specifically address the historical position of the show's subtitle sub·ti·tle  
n.
1. A secondary, usually explanatory title, as of a literary work.

2. A printed translation of the dialogue of a foreign-language film shown at the bottom of the screen.

tr.v.
, Argentine artist Sergio Vega's Modernismo Tropical, 2002, a slapstick slapstick

Comedy characterized by broad humour, absurd situations, and vigorous, often violent action. It took its name from a paddlelike device, probably introduced by 16th-century commedia dell'arte troupes, that produced a resounding whack when one comic actor used it to
 narrative in photographs and text that tells the story of International Style "tropicalized," is perhaps the most successful. But though in some ways consummately modern, the garden, home, and park designs of postwar Brazilian botanist, ecologist, and designer Robert Burle Marx go farther still by providing a starting point Noun 1. starting point - earliest limiting point
terminus a quo

commencement, get-go, offset, outset, showtime, starting time, beginning, start, kickoff, first - the time at which something is supposed to begin; "they got an early start"; "she knew from the
 for many of the strategies demonstrated here: planning and designing, devoting oneself to the local, crossing existing disciplines and learning new ones.
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Article Details
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Author:Harris, Larissa
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Critical Essay
Geographic Code:1U2NY
Date:Nov 1, 2005
Words:560
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