Posted by Rosie Jennings on May 29th, 2025.
Subscribe to comments | Both comments and pings are currently closed.
Cookies
We use analytics to help us understand how people use our site. This means we set a cookie. See our cookie policy.
Anti-Monumentality and the Afterlives of ‘Land Art’ in Britain
Henry Moore Institute, Leeds
Symposium: Wednesday 22 October 2025
Deadline: Monday 28 July 2025, 17:00 BST
This one-day symposium sets out to stimulate new inquiry into the histories and futures of ‘land art’ in Britain.
The label of ‘land artist’ has been contentious for many artists working in the UK. Hamish Fulton and Richard Long both rejected it and looked to distance themselves from the aggressive interventions of heavy earthworks associated with American land art. The term is similarly inadequate when applied to a later generation of artists including Tacita Dean and Anya Gallaccio who make work that directly or implicitly gestures to the lingering influence of land art.
How, then, do we understand the afterlives of ‘land art’? Or perhaps, as a defined movement, it never ‘lived’ at all… Poised on the verge of dissolution, what do we make of the loose set of approaches, techniques, materials, and modes of documentation associated with land art as it continues to inform contemporary art today?
Amid this breakdown in terminology, there is a tendency of much land art in Britain to work with natural processes rather than against them. They emphasise transience or entropy, rather than monumental permanence. They foreground narrative rather than stasis – a dramatic contrast with North American works in a ‘heroic’ register by, for instance, Robert Smithson and Michael Heizer.
Consider David Nash’s Wooden Boulder (1978-present) or Andy Goldsworthy’s Midsummer Snowballs (2000). These are not works to which we can pilgrimage. The pilgrimage is instead taken up by Derek Jarman in his film Journey to Avebury (1971) or Tacita Dean in her audio work Trying to Find the Spiral Jetty (1997), where they go out in search of monuments but transmute them into the airy impalpability of time-based media.
All anti-monumental in their differing ways, these works are evasive, fleeting, but conceptually concentrated. They question humankind’s strained relationship with the natural environment brought into focus through our contemporary moment of the Anthropocene and the climate crisis. By prioritising process and transition, they speak against the commercialisation and commodification of the natural world. Largely freed from dependence on the investment of major patrons (see David Nash’s laconic summary of his place-based practice as ‘have axe, will travel’), their accessible techniques and simple materials signal the radical democratisation of both artmaking and land access.
This event is programmed to coincide with Passing Strange: British Land Art Through Time at Henry Moore Institute 18 July – 2 November 2025.
Questions to be addressed may include:
We welcome 15-minute presentations or creative responses. Applicants are kindly asked to submit: a brief abstract (no more than 250 words) a short biographical note (100 words) The deadline to apply is Monday 28 July 2025, 17:00 BST
Please email your proposals to: [email protected]
If you would like to apply in another format, such as video or audio, this is also welcomed. Please contact [email protected] if you would like to discuss this.
Speakers will receive an honorarium of £100, and travel and accommodation costs within the UK will be reimbursed.