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Nature does not proceed in a straight line, it is rather a sprawling development.
Robert Smithson
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Robert Smithson
Age: 35 †
Born: 1938
Born: January 2
Died: 1973
Died: July 20
Art Theorist
Artist
Conceptual Artist
Draftsperson
Drawer
Geologist
Land Artist
Painter
Photographer
Sculptor
Visual Artist
Passaic
New Jersey
Robert I. Smithson
Lines
Rather
Artist
Sprawling
Nature
Proceed
Doe
Straight
Line
Development
More quotes by Robert Smithson
Language should be an ever developing procedure and not an isolated occurrence.
Robert Smithson
Nature is never finished.
Robert Smithson
Museums are tombs, and it looks like everything is turning into a museum.
Robert Smithson
Language should find itself in the physical world, and not end up locked in an idea in somebody's head
Robert Smithson
Artists are expected to fit into fraudulent categories.
Robert Smithson
I am for an art that takes into account the direct effect of the elements as they exist from day to day apart from representation.
Robert Smithson
Cultural confinement takes place when a curator imposes his own limits on an art exhibition, rather than asking an artist to set his limits.
Robert Smithson
A vacant white room with lights is still a submission to the neutral. Works of art seen in such spaces seem to be going through a kind of esthetic convalescence.
Robert Smithson
For many artists the universe is expanding for some it is contracting.
Robert Smithson
The museums and parks are graveyards above the ground- congealed memories of the past that act as a pretext for reality.
Robert Smithson
A camera is wild in just about anybody's hands, therefore one must set limits. But cameras have a life of their own. Cameras care nothing about cults or isms. They are indifferent mechanical eyes, ready to devour anything in sight. They are lenses of the unlimited reproduction.
Robert Smithson
The memory of what is not may be better than the amnesia of what is.
Robert Smithson
Artists themselves are not confined, but their output is.
Robert Smithson
As long as cameras are around no artist will be free of bewilderment.
Robert Smithson
A work of art when placed in a gallery loses its charge, and becomes a portable object or surface disengaged from the outside world.
Robert Smithson
Photographs are the results of a diminution of solar energy, and the camera is an entropic machine for recording gradual loss of light.
Robert Smithson
An emotion is suggested and demolished in one glance by certain words.
Robert Smithson
Abstraction is everybody's zero but nobody's nought.
Robert Smithson
The museum spreads its surfaces everywhere, and becomes an untitled collection of generalizations that mobilize the eye.
Robert Smithson
Banal words function as a feeble phenomena that fall into their own mental bogs of meaning.
Robert Smithson