Current:Home > InvestImmerse yourself in this colossal desert 'City' — but leave the selfie stick at home -Elevate Capital Network
Immerse yourself in this colossal desert 'City' — but leave the selfie stick at home
View
Date:2025-04-17 01:50:34
Most people who visit Michael Heizer's City start out in Las Vegas, a place dominated by the blaring sounds of slot machines, air conditioning, and the Bellagio Hotel and Casino's famous fountains dancing in time to the songs of Celine Dion.
So it's quite a shock, after a three-hour drive north, to find yourself in the middle of the baking Nevada desert, surrounded by absolute silence.
For more than five decades, American artist Michael Heizer has been working in this remote environment to complete a colossal art installation. Located at least a 90-minute drive from the nearest small town, and costing around $40 million (so far) in construction and maintenance costs, City is one of the largest artworks in the world. It recently opened to the public.
A city unlike any other
Heizer started work on City in 1970. The artist built his masterwork out of local rock and dirt, which he and a team of workers quarried over the years. The site is more than one-and-a-half miles long by a half-mile wide, and consists of clusters of low-slung, gravel-covered mounds, as well as imposing sculptures made of smooth concrete and rough stone separated by a network of rocky runways and winding, empty streets.
Some parts of City look like they've been there forever. There are dark, misshapen structures that look like gravestones in an ancient cemetery, and undulating hillocks reminiscent of indigenous shell mounds. And there are also concrete curbs like you'd find on any modern city street and futuristic-looking geometric sculptures.
It's like a pre-Columbian Mayan settlement, a highway interchange in Las Vegas, and the desert planet Tatooine from Star Wars all rolled into one.
City isn't like any other art experience on Earth. And as art experiences go, it's unforgiving.
Only up to six people are allowed to visit the installation per day. There's no welcome center, restroom, or shade from the relentless desert sun. There isn't so much as a chair or bench to rest on.
There's really nothing else to do except roam the seemingly-endless dirt pathways, get up close to the imposing architectural forms, and contemplate the effects of the changing light.
The artist and his vision
Michael Heizer was part of a wave of iconoclastic, mostly young, white men who turned their backs on the traditional gallery scene in the late 1960s and '70s. Instead, Heizer (and fellow artists like Walter de Maria and Robert Smithson) used the wilderness of the American West as canvas and paint.
Heizer became known for creating remote artworks that were so huge, they looked like they'd been put there by superhuman forces. He's never been interested in explaining why he creates works on the land on such a large scale.
"You know, I'm not big on talking about art," Heizer told NPR in 2012. More recently, he told The New York Times in August, "I am not here to tell people what it all means. You can figure it out for yourself."
So to learn more about the artist and his installation, NPR turned to a man who knows them both pretty well.
"Mike Heizer doesn't come for the opening party," said Los Angeles County Museum of Art director Michael Govan. "He comes to make the work and to push definitions of what art is."
Since the mid-1990s, Govan has been helping Heizer get City ready for the public.
"It was not the easiest thing to convince people to give money to move earth in the desert with no completion date and simply an artist's vision," Govan said.
Photography is forbidden at City. And Govan said the artwork doesn't even photograph particularly well, even by drone. Audiences can only engage with the installation by being fully immersed in it.
"I think the world's catching up to that idea of experience that Mike Heizer was already interested in, long ago," Govan said.
But there's nothing Instagrammable about Heizer's masterwork. Being there — even getting there — takes commitment.
And that's the point.
"There's no duplicate for this experience," Govan said. "And after working here with Mike, it really is hard to go back to a museum with paintings and frames. It just doesn't sometimes satisfy."
Edited by: Jennifer Vanasco Produced by: Isabella Gomez Sarmiento
veryGood! (981)
Related
- Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
- Topeka was at the center of Brown v. Board. Decades later, segregation of another sort lingers
- High interest rates take growing toll as planned apartments, wind farms, shops are scrapped
- Body of US airman fatally shot by Florida deputy returned to Georgia ahead of funeral
- South Korean president's party divided over defiant martial law speech
- North Carolina revenue decline means alternate sources for voucher spending considered
- Creighton's Baylor Scheierman among standouts in NBA draft combine scrimmages
- Idaho inmate pleads guilty to escaping hospital after correctional officers are attacked
- Angelina Jolie nearly fainted making Maria Callas movie: 'My body wasn’t strong enough'
- Justice Department to investigate Kentucky’s juvenile jails after use of force, isolation complaints
Ranking
- Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
- Cale Makar scores twice, Avalanche stay alive with 5-3 win against Stars
- Creighton's Baylor Scheierman among standouts in NBA draft combine scrimmages
- The Mirage casino, which ushered in an era of Las Vegas Strip megaresorts in the ‘90s, is closing
- Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
- 2024 NFL international games: Schedule for upcoming season features Giants, Patriots and more
- Family of California Navy veteran who died after officer knelt on his neck settles lawsuit for $7.5M
- The Fed is struggling to break the back of inflation. Here's why.
Recommendation
Alex Murdaugh’s murder appeal cites biased clerk and prejudicial evidence
Former St. Catherine University dean of nursing, lover accused of embezzling over $400K
U.S. poised to send $1 billion in weapons to Israel, sources say
Creighton's Baylor Scheierman among standouts in NBA draft combine scrimmages
Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
Camille Kostek and Rob Gronkowski Privately Broke Up and Got Back Together
Bronny James focusing on NBA 'dream,' not playing with dad LeBron
Angela Bassett mourns loss of '9-1-1' crew member who died in crash: 'We're all rocked by it'