Sacred Art of the Earth: Ancient and Contemporary Earthworks by Maureen A. Korp, Maureen Korp

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(Paperback)

  • Pub. Date: April 1997
  • 208pp
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: April 1997
    • Publisher: Continuum International Publishing Group
    • Format: Paperback, 208pp

    Synopsis

    Sacred Art of the Earth reviews historically indigenous land use in North America and analyzes theory of sacred place. It also presents a typology for describing sacred sites as physical places and situates the archaic experience of sacred place within the contemporary work of several internationally prominent artists. Illustrations.

    Publishers Weekly

    In this fascinating study, Korp explores the various ways in which cultures have defined sacred spaces and the ways in which those spaces have been immortalized in various works of art. Korp argues that space is consecrated in the place where the barrier between sacred and profane is so thin that a creative "irruption" of one realm into the other occurs. Korp makes useful distinctions between hierophany, the experience of the sacred, karatophany, the experience of the sacred presence in landscape, and theophany, the attribution of the sacred to the presence of a particular divinity in a particular place. Korp reviews the major ancient sacred places on the North American landscape. She also discusses some works by contemporary artists of landscape sculpture. While one-quarter of Korp's book is endnotes and bibliography, it lacks an index. Even so, Korp puts forth a good discussion of how various modes of human artifice attempt to complement and emphasize the sacred character of landscape. (Apr.)

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