CHANGING NATURE SENSE AND ECOLOGICAL ART IN THE CONTEXT OF PRESENTING Cover Image

DEĞİŞEN DOĞA ALGISI VE ARMAĞAN ETME BAĞLAMINDA EKOLOJİK SANAT
CHANGING NATURE SENSE AND ECOLOGICAL ART IN THE CONTEXT OF PRESENTING

Author(s): Nuray Akkol
Subject(s): Fine Arts / Performing Arts, Recent History (1900 till today), Human Ecology, Environmental interactions
Published by: Sanat ve Dil Araştırmaları Enstitüsü
Keywords: Nature; Ecological Art; Land Art;

Summary/Abstract: Along with historical changes, philosophical thoughts that are human and nature centered have changed. With the industrial and technological developments in the industrial society, the human control and exploitation over nature has increased even further. Along with the sense of changing nature after the 1960s, the artists created their art in nature and went beyond galleries and museums, which were recognized as exhibition areas until then. With this; the artists had reacted to the modernist and elitist attitude of the museums and galleries seen as the symbol of the status quo, and at the same time wanted to portray adjoining by blending with the nature. The ecological art defined within land art, aims to reflect the loss and destruction of nature instead of creating a new form in nature, adding something new to nature or intervening with it. Artists try to create awareness with their work by revealing humans shaping nature by objectifying it and using it irresponsibly for their own purposes and by drawing attention to these problems. The main source of environmental and ecological problems today is considered to be humans taking whatever they need from nature without giving anything back and taking over it until it is destroyed because of their perception that nature is under their order. With ecological arts; artists wanted to give back to the nature in the context of presenting what’s been destroyed and taken from the nature by humans. In this study, the attitudes and works of artists such as Lynne Hull, Joseph Boys, Mel Chin, and Alan Sonfist will be examined and studied in the context of presenting ecological art within environmental art.

  • Issue Year: 7/2018
  • Issue No: 44
  • Page Range: 421-427
  • Page Count: 7
  • Language: Turkish