![]() ![]() Robert smithson’s ‘broken circle/spiral hill’ is an artwork with a rich history, with a deep resonance for the present, and with an unknown future. ‘broken circle/spiral hill’ imagines a future where a former sand mine can be a location to think deeper and look harder at the surface of our planet. smithson was committed to working with landscapes scarred by industry, thinking through future uses for exhausted landscapes. LlF: smithson often talked about the future, and he was fascinated with the idea of entropy – that everything rises into ruin. Image by robert smithson © holt/smithson foundation / licensed by VAGA at ARSĭB: what ideas does ‘broken circle/spiral hill’ address, specifically regarding robert smithson’s notions of the future? ![]() Robert smithson, ‘broken circle’ (1971) | emmen, the netherlands | water, sand, and boulder | diameter: 140 ft. ‘broken circle’ shortly after completion in 1971 he was committed to making art a necessary and urgent part of everyday life, and envisioned a future where artists worked with industry to draw attention to the ecological impact of human beings on the world. this earthwork embodies smithson’s interest in post-industrial landscapes. What I love about this artwork is that is shows us how landscape is first shaped by geological history, and second by human history. smithson was fascinated by the constructed and reclaimed nature of the dutch landscape, and in emmen he found a perfect location to explore ideas core to his artistic practice. the site is a place where you can see geological with you own eyes. Lisa le feuvre (LlF): ‘broken circle/spiral hill’ is sited in a former sand-mine, cut into the side of a terminal moraine. still from nancy holt and robert smithson, breaking ground: broken circle/spiral hill (1971-2011) © holt/smithson foundation/ licensed by VAGA at ARSĭesignboom (DB): what makes ‘broken circle/spiral hill’ so significant to this day, in the context of both art history and the local community of emmen? designboom spoke with lisa le feuvre, the foundation’s executive director, to learn more about the artwork’s significance to this day, robert smithson’s notions of the future, and what she hopes visitors to the 2021 open weekends will take away from their visit. Working with the current landowners and dutch partners land art contemporary, the holt/smithson foundation aims to secure a sustainable future of this artwork and to find support to bring the land into public ownership. ![]() the artist described it as ‘a major piece’ and it sparked his interest in working with industry and post-industrial landscape to make art ‘a necessary part of their reclamation projects.’ sited on private land, the artwork’s future is uncertain as it was donated to the people of the netherlands, but the specifics of how the work should be cared for and who should take responsibility for the land on which it sits are unclear. Robert smithson’s ‘broken circle/spiral hill’ is a land artwork with a rich history, a deep resonance for the present, and an unknown future. Header video by carlos mora for land art contemporary featuring anne reenders, lisa le feuvre and the director of sonsbeek beyond the limits ‘broken circle/spiral hill’, courtesy of land art contemporary and holt/smithson foundation (also header image) ‘in 2021 our ambition is to build a sustainable future for the artwork, to enable it to inspire future generations,’ says le feuvre. upon the artwork’s fiftieth anniversary, the holt/smithson foundation and land art contemporary are working with CBK emmen and dutch partners to program a series of open weekends between july and october 2021, featuring talks, screenings, and presentations. smithson is known to have donated the piece to the people of the netherlands, however, as it is sited on private land, its future remains uncertain. ‘broken circle/spiral hill’ was created for the 1971 edition of the temporary outdoor exhibition sonsbeek, one year after his much referenced ‘spiral jetty’ at rozel point on the great salt lake in utah (more about it here). ![]() ‘smithson was fascinated by the constructed and reclaimed nature of the dutch landscape, and in emmen he found a perfect location to explore ideas core to his artistic practice,’ lisa le feuvre, holt/smithson foundation executive director, tells designboom in an interview. the quarry and ‘broken circle’ can be seen from the top of the hill, reached via a spiraling path, while at the center of the circle is an immovable huge boulder deposited by ancient glacial movements. the monumental land art piece, which marks smithson’s only extant earthwork outside of the US, consists of two parts: ‘broken circle’, a semi-circular jetty built into a quarry lake filled with reflecting green water and ‘spiral hill’, a cone-shaped hill beside the lake. In 1971, american artist robert smithson carved ‘broken circle/spiral hill’ into the shoreline of a former sand mine near the city of emmen, in the netherlands. ![]()
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