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Earthwork

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Earthwork

An artwork which involves the manipulation of the natural environment and/or the use of natural materials, such as earth, stones, or wood, largely a phenomenon of the late 1960s and 1970s. Although some were exhibited in galleries, most earthworks were vast and usually constructed on remote, deserted sites and hence only known through photographs and plans. Robert Smithson and Michael Heizer (1944– ), two leading exponents, engaged in physically overpowering works, for example, Heizer's Complex One, Central Eastern Nevada (1972, unfinished), an elongated, pyramidal hill of rammed earth supported by steel and concrete.

The Earthworks or Land art movement drew its inspiration from Conceptual art, seeking to expand the concept of art, and of sculpture in particular, and to redefine attitudes both to technology and to the natural environment.

earthwork

In archaeology, any artificial bank or mound of earth with or without a ditch. Examples include barrows or burial mounds, henge monuments (circular banks with ditches), earthen circles, cursus banks, dykes, hill forts, ancient settlement sites, primitive cultivation systems, trackways, castle mounds or mottes, and medieval homestead moats.

The causewayed enclosures of Wessex (early Neolithic or New Stone Age) may have needed 100,000 hours of labour; that is, an estimated 250 people working together for six weeks. Estimates for Silbury Hill (late Neolithic) suggest 18 million hours of work. How this was organized is pure supposition.



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One Sunday when Joe, greatly enjoying his pipe, had so plumed himself on being "most awful dull," that I had given him up for the day, I lay on the earthwork for some time with my chin on my hand, descrying traces of Miss Havisham and Estella all over the prospect, in the sky and in the water, until at last I resolved to mention a thought concerning them that had been much in my head.
She heard the shrill whistle of alarm, the beaten drum; she saw the spade exchanged for the rifle, and the long line of toilers disappear behind the natural earthwork which their labours had created.
Several battalions of soldiers, in their shirt sleeves despite the cold wind, swarmed in these earthworks like a host of white ants; spadefuls of red clay were continually being thrown up from behind the bank by unseen hands.
 
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