Saturday 26 January 2013

Robert Smithson: The Psychogeography Of New Jersey



I'm doing quite a lot of reading in the midst of my current phase of research and creative meditation.  Paintbrushes are being wielded on a small scale but in reality, most of my current activity is taking place between computer screens, camera lenses and the pages of sketchbooks and literature.




One book that's already making an impression, despite my being only part way in, is 'Robert Smithson: The Collected Writings' , edited by Jack Flam. [1.]  It was recommended to me by Andy Smith when we exhibited in Birmingham last November and my good friend Suzie was kind enough to buy me a copy for Christmas.  Thanks to them both; it's already providing plenty of food for thought.


Smithson With 'Spiral Jetty' Work In Progress.
Photograph: Gianfranco Gorgoni, 1970
Film Still From: Robert Smithson, 'Spiral Jetty', 1970


I knew Smithson as a leading light of the 1960s and 70s American Land Art movement and for his 'Spiral Jetty' constructed in Utah's Great Salt Lake but hadn't really considered the conceptual and philosophical underpinnings of his practice.  As the writings demonstrate, a wide range of serious and original thought lay behind his Minimalist Sculpture and later interventions in the physical landscape.  So far, two pieces have really chimed with my own interests, reflecting, as they do, an identifiably American Psychogeographical attitude to specific locations.


Robert Smithson, 'Untitled', Mirrored Plastic & Steel, 1964


'The Crystal Land' [2.] is Smithson's account of a geological expedition to the quarries of his native New Jersey, made with the Minimalist artist Donald Judd and their wives in 1966.  It fascinates me how Smithson switches focus between microscopic, macroscopic and personal spaces and between factual descriptions of the area's mineralogy; reflections on the aesthetics and mood of the region; anecdotes about the day's events and a meditation on the inconsequential details of their car's interior.  In one paragraph he describes excavating quartz crystals; in the next he discusses the area's middle-income housing developments, listing pretentious names and cheesy colour schemes, then explains how,

"The highways crisscross through towns and become man-made geological networks of concrete.  In fact, the entire landscape has a mineral presence.  From the shiny chrome diners to glass windows of shopping centres, a sense of the crystalline prevails." [3.]

A subsequent account of their ice cream break quickly becomes a discussion of the structure of ice crystals before Smithson embarks on the following description,

"My eyes glanced over the dashboard, it became a complex of chrome fixed into an embankment of steel.  A glass disc covered the clock.  The speedometer was broken.  Cigarettes were packed into the ashtray.  Faint reflections slid over the windshield.  Out of sight in the glove compartment was a silver flashlight and an Esso map of Vermont.  Under the radio dial (55-7-9-11-14-16) was a row of five plastic buttons in the shape of cantilevered cubes.  The rearview mirror dislocated the road behind us.  While listening to the radio some of us read the Sunday newspapers.  The pages made slight noises as they turned; each sheet folded over their laps forming temporary geographies of paper.  A valley of print or a ridge of photographs might come and go in an instant." [4.]


Robert Smithson, 'Untitled', Mirrored Plastic & Steel, 1965


Everything before that beautiful, pivotal paragraph relates to the theme of crystals, whilst everything after involves the dismal qualities of the wider landscape.  Slag heaps; quarry equipment; pylons; railways and fences predominate over "partially demolished" [5.] vegetation.  A neighbouring region of swamps, motels and garbage fires suggests a Martian film location.  Finally, the image of mineral structure returns as they re-enter New York City amongst the repeating square tiles of the Lincoln Tunnel.


Robert Smithson, 1962.  Photographer Unknown

The second document 'A Tour Of The Monuments Of Passaic, New Jersey (1967)' [6.] describes a later, solo expedition into the artist's home state and opens with him boarding a bus and perusing newspaper surveys of New York galleries and a S.F. novel by Brian Aldiss, (Entitled 'Earthworks') appropriately enough.


'The Bridge Monument Showing Wooden Sidewalks,'
Photograph: Robert Smithson, 1967
'Monument With Pontoons: The Pumping Derrick',
Photograph: Robert Smithson, 1967
'The Great Pipe Monument',  Photograph: Robert Smithson, 1967

The 'monuments' that that Smithson visits in Passaic are of the most mundane variety.  The first is a river swing bridge of seemingly utilitarian design that he photographs repeatedly with his cheap camera.  I'm instantly reminded of my own current habit of standing in the cold to photograph railway bridges and cement hoppers with a thoroughness verging on obsession.  Then follows an investigation of a pumping derrick, pipeline and a water outfall system in which Smithson suddenly shifts from factual description to sexual metaphor and wild free association.


'The Fountain Monument, Birdseye View',
Photograph: Robert Smithson, 1967

'The Fountain Monument, Side View', 
Photograph: Robert Smithson, 1967


I'm struck by how dazzling sunlight affects the photographer Smithson's relationship to his surroundings and,

"…cinema-ized the subject, turning the bridge and the river into an over exposed picture.  Photographing it…was like photographing a photograph.  The sun became a monstrous light-bulb that projected a detached series of 'stills' through my Instamatic into my eye." [7.]

The ways in which our experience of reality's continuum is modified once we interpose a lens between it and our eye is something that always fascinates me during my own photographic forays.

And so the piece progresses, through workaday streets and the sublime vacancy of car lots; amongst suburbs and an urban centre that actually feels very uncentered.  At each step the most conventionally unpromising of material provides the stimulus for associative thought, ideas generation and philosophical discourse.  Viewing a partially constructed road triggers a meditation on how suburbs grow, constructing a supposedly utopian future without any historical foundation.  He starts to see the future as,

"…lost somewhere in the dumps of the non-historical past;" [8.],

and observes that,

"…Time turns metaphors into things and stacks them up in cold rooms or places them in the celestial play-grounds of the suburbs." [9.]

Passaic appears full of holes to the artist, - spread thin in comparison with the density of urban New York.  These qualities of insubstantiality and anti-historical, vacant neutrality are, I think, a recognisable quality of those transitional zones often called 'Edgelands' today [10.].  Smithson's impressions of Passaic's lack of substance leads him to re-imagine it as a map of itself with himself standing on cardboard, not earth. 


Robert Smithson, 'Negative Map Showing Region Of The Monuments
Along The Passaic River',
1967


The piece ends with an almost metaphysical discussion of the nature of entropy, - itself triggered by his observation of the final monument, - a simple sand pit that he likens to a "model dessert" [11.].  It becomes the hypothetical arena for an experiment to prove his theory on the subject.


'The Sandbox Monument', Phtograph: Robert Smithson, 1967


I love these pieces, not least for the quality of Smithson's writing, but also because they seem to validate my own habitual view of the world and, (to others - possibly baffling), behaviour.  He exhibits an approach that is simultaneously intelligent, intuitive and imaginative and I applaud his ability to find visual delight and profound significance in the most overlooked of subject matter.  I'm inspired by his example to write more creatively in accompaniment of the photographs from my own expeditions.




[1.]:  Robert Smithson, Jack Flam (Ed.), ‘Robert Smithson: The Collected Writings’, Berkeley, University Of California Press, 1996

[2.] - [5.]:  Robert Smithson, ‘The Crystal Land’, 1966, In: Robert Smithson, Jack Flam (Ed.), ‘Robert Smithson: The Collected Writings’, Berkeley, University Of California Press, 1996

[6.] - [11.]:  Robert Smithson, ‘A Tour Of The Monuments Of Passaic, New Jersey’, 1967, In: Robert Smithson, Jack Flam (Ed.), ‘Robert Smithson: The Collected Writings’, Berkeley, University Of California Press, 1996

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