New Jersey as Non-Site

Kelly Baum author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Yale University Press

Published:26th Nov '13

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

New Jersey as Non-Site cover

“Best in Show” — 2014 AAM Museum Publications Design Competition

Between 1950 and 1975, some of the postwar era’s most innovative artists flocked to a very unexpected place: New Jersey. Appreciating what others tended to ignore or mock, they gravitated to the state’s most desolate peripheries: its industrial wastescapes, crumbling cities, crowded highways, and banal suburbs. There they produced some of the most important work of their careers. The breakthroughs in land, conceptual, performance, and site-specific art that New Jersey helped catalyze are the subject of New Jersey as Non-Site, whose title evokes the mixed-media sculptures that Robert Smithson began to create in 1968 while driving the state’s highways with Nancy Holt.

This catalogue examines more than 100 works by sixteen artists, including Amiri Baraka, George Brecht, Dan Graham, Allan Kaprow, Gordon Matta-Clark, and George Segal. Organized around three themes—ruin, cooperation, and displacement—Kelly Baum’s essay considers their work in relationship to seismic shifts in the world of art and equally dramatic changes to New Jersey’s economy, infrastructure, landscape, demography, and social stability.

Distributed for the Princeton University Art Museum


Exhibition Schedule:

Princeton University Art Museum
(10/05/13–01/04/14)

ISBN: 9780300174373

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 1034g

176 pages