DCP

Troublemakers: The Story of Land Art

James Crump
Part of

53rd New York Film Festival

September 25 - October 11, 2015

The latest film by James Crump is a beautiful, meticulously constructed tribute to the great Land (aka Earth) artists of the 1960s and 70s, who rethought the question of scale and the relationships between artist, landscape, and viewer.

DIRECTOR
James Crump
YEAR
2015
COUNTRY
USA
RUNTIME
72 minutes
FORMAT
DCP

The titular troublemakers are the New York–based Land (aka Earth) artists of the 1960s and 70s, who walked away from the reproducible and the commodifiable, migrated to the American Southwest, worked with earth and light and seemingly limitless space, and rethought the question of scale and the relationships between artist, landscape, and viewer. Director James Crump (Black White + Gray) has meticulously constructed Troublemakers from interviews (with Germano Celant, Virginia Dwan, and others), photos and footage of Walter De Maria, Michael Heizer, Robert Smithson, Nancy Holt, and Charles Ross at work on their astonishing creations, including Heizer’s Double Negative, a 1,500-feet long “line” cut between two canyons on Mormon Mesa in Nevada; Holt’s concrete Sun Tunnels, through each of which the sun appears differently according to the season; De Maria’s The Lightning Field in New Mexico; and Smithson’s Spiral Jetty, built on the Great Salt Lake in Utah. A beautiful tribute to a great moment in art.

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