LOS ANGELES, CA.- In 1968 Robert Smithson declared: A great artist can make art by simply casting a glance. This exhibition takes him at his word. Casting a Glance: Dancing with Smithson invites eighteen artists to join him on the floor as partners who resist, improvise, and extend the rhythm of his thinking.
Casting a Glance tracks Smithsons trajectory from his early 1960s drawings that confront the crumbling ideals of European Modernism with a queer sensibility to his searing critiques of industrial capitalism and attention to geological timescales, positioning him as both provocateur and visionary. Smithson called for artists to infiltrate corporations, championed the agency of all earth-beings, choosing the exhausted edges of suburbia over charismatic metropolitan centers. His innovative conception of the site/Nonsite dialectic, his redefinition of what sculpture could be, and his conviction that art is a philosophical encounter with the Earths surface converge in this vibrant dance among the artists on view.
Rarely seen works by Smithson chosen in dialogue with the participating artists capture his restless energy. His drawings of landmark earthworks, pseudo-minimalist sculptures, references to the occult and the erotic, sit alongside renderings of imagined islands and material experiments. Smithson asked urgent questions about place, decay, and the fictions of permanence. Mirror Displacement Indoors (1969), colloquially known as Dead Tree, anchors the exhibition. It is comprised of an uprooted tree, with leaves and root ball intact, and double-sided mirrors inserted into the tangle of roots and branches. Over time the tree dries, the leaves fall, the earth falls from the roots, while the fixed structure of the mirrors remain stable. Decay and entropy are key concepts for Smithson, and are threads running through the exhibition.
The eighteen artists gathered here both challenge and align with Smithsons art and ideas. Tony Craggs In No Time (2018) joins works by Leonor Antunes and Álvaro Urbano in a knot of arboreal forms, extending Smithsons fascination with trees and their mirrored lives. Delcy Moreloss grounded forms quietly speak to An-My Lês charged landscape, which, in turn, suggests a kinship to Smithsons imagined islands. James Wellings Barbizon (2025) channels Smithsons dismissive obsession with constructed landscapes, while Giuseppe Penones Geometria nelle mani ovale (2005) stands in dialogue with Smithsons reclining, decaying tree. Ana Mendietas earthworks resonate with Smithsons Hypothetical Continents, with both artists employing the photographic image to make their temporal sculptures immutable.
Smithsons speculative crystal universes are echoed in Pierre Huyghes evocation of half-million-year-old selenite, while Tavares Strachans redefinition of polar exploration rub against Smithsons mapping of New Jersey as a different kind of elsewhere. A rarely seen mirror table sculpture from Smithsons studio supports three hand scaled sculptures by Gabriel Orozco, reflecting the continuity of these mirrored surfaces into the present.
Nairy Baghramians Jupon Suspendu (2017) folds her sculptural lexicon into the conversation, gently interrupting Smithsons hand-built Minimalism. Daniel Boyds collages double back on Hercules, pushing against Smithsons conflation of camp bodies with classical statuary, while two scores by Bruce Nauman ask for a hired dancer to clear a room and telephone the artist. Adrián Villar Rojass Return the World X (2012) shares time with Smithsons Partially Buried Woodshed (1970). Julie Mehretus Six Bardos: Luminous Appearance (2018) which meditates on time, memory, and transcendence, is placed in dialogue with the atmospheric veils of color in Smithsons 1963 painting Tear.
Steve McQueens Broken Column (2014) speaks directly to Smithsons acute attention to materiality and material history, while Tacita Deans Salt (A Collection) (201314) from the Great Salt Lake slips beside Smithsons own drawings of Spiral Jetty (1970); both charting the eponymous film. Three moving image works complement the exhibition. East/Coast West Coast, made with Nancy Holt in 1969, is an improvised a dialogue in which Holt and Smithson perform the stereotypical positions of American East Coast and West Coast artists of the late 1960s. Smithson described the thirty-five-minute film Spiral Jetty (1970) as a set of disconnections, a bramble of stabilized fragments taken from things obscure and fluid, ingredients trapped in a succession of frames, a stream of viscosities both still and moving a phrase that reverberates across and through Casting A Glance. Swamp, from 1971, also made with Holt, is shot in the swamplands of New Jersey, Smithsons home state, a location he frequently returned to in his work.
Artists: Robert Smithson with Leonor Antunes, Nairy Baghramian, Daniel Boyd, Tony Cragg, Tacita Dean, Pierre Huyghe, An-My Lê, Steve McQueen, Julie Mehretu, Ana Mendieta, Delcy Morelos, Bruce Nauman, Gabriel Orozco, Giuseppe Penone, Tavares Strachan, Álvaro Urbano, Adrián Villar Rojas, and James Welling
Lisa Le Feuvre is a curator, writer, and editor. In 2018 she became inaugural Executive Director of Holt/Smithson Foundation, the artist foundation dedicated to the legacies of artists Nancy Holt (1938-2014) and Robert Smithson (1938-1973).
Le Feuvre has curated more than seventy-five exhibitions as an institutional and independent curator, edited over thirty books and journals, spoken at 150 museums and universities across the world, and has published more than 125 essays and interviews with artists. Her recent curated exhibitions include For What Its Worth: Value Systems in Art since 1960 at The Warehouse, Dallas, (2024, curated with Thomas Feulmer); Robert Smithson / Teresita Fernández at SITE SANTA FE, New Mexico (2024, curated with Fernández); at the Wexner Center for the Arts, Ohio Nancy Holt: Power Systems and Maria Hupfield: The Endless Return of Fabulous Panther (Biimskojiwan) (2025); and, on display through next year at the Farnsworth Art Museum, Joan Jonas: An Island Departure (with Jaime DeSimone). Le Feuvres recent publications include the introduction to the compendium Great Women Sculptors (Phaidon Press) and texts on the artists Henry Moore, Kapwani Kiwanga, Delcy Morelos, Charlotte Moth, Lucia Pizzani, Robert Rauschenberg and Medardo Rosso.