A Land Artist’s Work Evades Demolition

1 week ago 76

Art & Design|A Land Artist’s Work Evades Demolition

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/05/07/arts/design/temporary-injunction-iowa-artwork.html

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A federal judge granted a temporary restraining order protecting a work by Mary Miss. A Des Moines museum wanted to destroy it, citing safety concerns.

A pond surrounded by a walkway, some green space, and many trees, against a blue sky.
Part of Mary Miss’s “Greenwood Pond: Double Site” (1989-1996) in Des Moines. A federal judge has issued an injunction preventing the arts center that commissioned it from tearing it down for safety reasons.Credit...Scott Mcfetridge/Associated Press

May 7, 2024, 7:05 p.m. ET

A work of environmental art by Mary Miss has evaded demolition — for now. A judge in the U.S. District Court in Des Moines on Friday granted her request for a temporary restraining order that would bar the Des Moines Art Center, the museum that commissioned the land art installation, from dismantling it. The museum maintains it has become a safety hazard and that the resources to repair it are not available.

The decision, the Art Center said in a statement, amounts to “a court-ordered stalemate.”

While the judge, Stephen H. Locher, found that destroying the work, “Greenwood Pond: Double Site” (1989-1996), would violate the Art Center’s contract with the artist, he also said that Miss could not force the museum to restore it to its original condition. He wrote, “The end result is therefore an unsatisfying status quo: the artwork will remain standing (for now) despite being in a condition that no one likes but that the court cannot order anyone to change.”

The lawsuit is the latest twist in a fight over the fate of “Greenwood Pond,” which has highlighted the difficulty of preserving large-scale public artworks, especially for smaller institutions. Located on the grounds of a city-owned park next to the museum, the installation is a collection of sloping walkways, wooden sitting areas, huts and towers that encourage visitors to engage with the landscape. Over the years, the wood has degraded substantially, and the Art Center estimates that it would cost between $2 million and $2.6 million to restore it. (Miss contests that, but has not provided another figure.)

In an interview on Tuesday, Miss said, “I don’t know why the museum wouldn’t come to me at this point and try to work this out instead of spending more money on legal fees.”

Having visited “Greenwood Pond: Double Site” while in Des Moines to testify, she said she felt a newfound appreciation for the work. “I just can’t imagine this whole thing going south at this point,” she said.


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