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Michael Jakob
Haute École du Paysage, d’Ingénierie et d’Architecture de Genève
Switzerland
No 15 (2016), Subject: artistic utopias and dreams
DOI: https://doi.org/10.15304/qui.15.4507
Submitted: 22-12-2017 Accepted: 22-12-2017 Published: 26-12-2017
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Abstract

A historical overview of the awareness of landscape reveals that it has been a largely ambiguous field from the very beginning, when the sought-after ideal – embodied by literature, art (the Golden Age), and gardens (with their timeless Neoplatonist-influenced agenda) – was already subject to a process of deconstruction. The period’s emphasis on ruins and the ephemeral can be read as a sign of what was to come – landscape, with its eternal movement through the seasons and its insistence on processes, has never settled on a single, all-encompassing utopia. It is not surprising, therefore, that aside from embracing the aesthetics of the ugly and the fragmentary, contemporary landscape art has always centred on time and transience.
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