“Invasive” (Site/Non-Site) - Artist Statement + Photos [2016]

land art Jun 30, 2024

Tree branches, concrete slab, leaves, grass, dirt, text, audio. [6' x 12' 10']

This project was first presented in 2016 in Boulder, Colorado. Images remain property of Connor Hesen. Prints available on request.


Site // Teller Lake Number 5

Non-site // University of Colorado Visual Arts Complex


Artist Statement

Invasive: Chaos and Order

"Invasive" is an environmental art project inspired by the concept of "Site / Non-Site," developed by Robert Smithson, a pioneer of Land art in the 1960s. A Site is a location outside the gallery, where the natural materials are collected and documented. A Non-Site is a body of objects and documentation inside the gallery, where the natural materials are transformed and displayed as sculpture.

The project is centered around Teller Lake #5, a location where human intervention has disrupted the natural balance of the ecosystem. Uneasy yet harmonious, eerie yet relaxing. Tall trees invade the path leading to the lake and begin to take over. Broken glass protrudes into walkways. Large slabs of concrete displaced on the beach. In 2013, goldfish are introduced to the lake by man, multiplying rapidly and threatening native species. The ecosystem is broken and infested. Man begins to plot solutions to this problem. In 2015, hungry pelicans arrive and consume most of the goldfish, restoring order to the lake without human intervention. Nature wins again.

The Site features large slabs of concrete on the beach, presumably left by human activity. One of these slabs is in perfect alignment with the lake, creating an unexpected visual connection.

The Non-Site of this project is located in the University of Colorado Visual Arts Complex stairwell, where the materials and impressions from the Site are reinterpreted and re-contextualized.

The Non-Site consists of the concrete slab found at Teller Lake, with a circular dirt ring, representing the slab and the circle found at the Site. The slab is raised off the floor by a cinder block, offering an abstract view of the piece from above. The work also includes photographs and maps of the Site, as well as samples from the area and an eerie audio-track ringing through the echoey space.

"Invasive" delves into the complex relationship between humans and nature by examining the impact of human intervention on Teller Lake #5. The project highlights the tension between the natural and artificial, and encourages viewers to think about the consequences of our actions on the environment. By exploring this issue, "Invasive" invites us to consider the delicate balance between nature and human activity, and how our choices can have far-reaching effects on the world around us.


Additional Photos


Originally published in 2016 by Connor Hesen.

Republished to habla.news/u/hes@nostrplebs.com on 6/30/2024 with slight edits.


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