No 15 (2016), Subject: artistic utopias and dreams
Submitted: 22-12-2017
Accepted: 22-12-2017
Published: 26-12-2017
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.
landscape art, aesthetics of the fragmentary, history of gardens, ruins, temporality