Brooklyn (Spiral Jetty After Smithson)

Vik Muniz Brazilian
1997
Not on view
Virtuoso of the commonplace, Muniz creates witty conceptual tableaux out of humble matter-fake etchings out of miles of thread, cloudscapes from cotton or marble floor patterning-that comment wryly on history and memory, perception and illusion. Continuing his affectionate assault on the giants of twentieth century art, Muniz created a Lilliputian version of Spiral Jetty-the late Robert Smithson's earthwork in the Great Salt Lake, Utah-out of dirt in his Brooklyn studio. While Muniz assumes the role of basement tinkerer to Smithson's Faustian persona, both created earthworks with dizzying shifts in scale and a marked temporal aspect: Spiral Jetty emerges and disappears with the tides while its Brooklyn miniature was erased with a tilt of the table. Most importantly, Muniz highlights the crucial role that photography played in the Smithson "original," a site-specific work whose remoteness is counterbalanced by the camera's capacity for infinite reproduction and dissemination.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • Title: Brooklyn (Spiral Jetty After Smithson)
  • Artist: Vik Muniz (Brazilian, born Sao Paulo, 1961)
  • Date: 1997
  • Medium: Gelatin silver print
  • Dimensions: 66.0 x 99.1 cm (26 x 39 in. )
  • Classification: Photographs
  • Credit Line: Purchase, Charina Foundation Inc. Gift, 2000
  • Object Number: 2000.4
  • Rights and Reproduction: © Vik Muniz
  • Curatorial Department: Photographs

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