2020
Kirsten Swenson
- Associate Professor
- University of Massachusetts Lowell
Abstract
“Landfills are the city’s largest remaining open spaces, not, like classic earthworks, splendid in desert isolation,” Mierle Laderman Ukeles wrote in 1992, advocating for “public earthworks” accessible by subway. This book addresses park design as a public art form, focusing on remediation projects by Ukeles, Nancy Holt, Agnes Denes, Robert Morris, and others that merged concepts of land art with cultivation, landscape design, and urban planning. These parks, associated with the deindustrialization of US cities after the 1970s, reimagined the public sphere, articulated land use history, and introduced new forms of engagement with ecology and the built environment. This book considers a set of visionary parks—both existing and unrealized—within their historical context and in light of the uneven development of today’s cities.