The Spiral
Jetty actually a monumental earthwork was created by artist Robert Smithson in
April 1970. Smithson documented the construction of the sculpture in a color
film named “Spiral Jetty”. It is located
off Rozel Point in the north arm of Great Salt Lake Utah entirely of mud, salt
crystals, black basalt rocks and water. Spiral Jetty is 460 m long, 4.6 m wide
coil that stretches over 1500 feet into the lake. Although, you may consider as
symbolize of large-scale earthwork of land art. Unquestionably the spiral Jetty
is an exceptional art historical reputation and its exclusive exquisiteness
have drawn visitors and media attention from throughout Utah and around the
world. In the normal precipitation, water level stays a level, but varies with
precipitation in the mountains surrounding the area, exposing the jetty in
times of drought and submerging.
Therefore,
spiral jetty is sometimes visible and sometimes submerged depending upon the
water level. Moreover due to consistent ruddy water and salt encrustation, the
black basalt rock emerges in large white rock. Moreover, during the
construction of the jetty, Robert Smithson & his wife wrote and directed a
32-minute color film, Spiral Jetty and funded by Virginia Dwan and Douglas
Christmas. In the movie, Smithson recorded his voice displaying natural history
museum, prehistoric relics, construction process, earth history and his
interest in geology, astronomy, paleontology, mythology and cinema.
Robert
Smithson selected the Rozel Point site, due to red blood color water and
connection with primordial sea and stark anti-pastoral beauty and industrial
leftovers from adjacent Golden Spike National Historic Site, as well as an old
pier and a few unused oil rigs. The thriving Salt-tolerant bacteria and algae make
the red hue water, although isolated from fresh water. The construction company
moves the rock into lake by a large tractor and a front end loader to haul the
6,650 tons of rock and earth into the lake. However, Smithson initially faces
difficulties to motivate the contractor to accept this strange proposal along
with land rights and earthmoving equipment. The construction took six days when
the lake water was unusually low due to drought. So when the water level comes
back make the spiral jetty invisible. In 2002, the area experience another
drought revealing the spiral jetty second time. This time spiral jetty remained
visible almost a year due to lowering the water level. The similar scenario
happened in the year of 2005, 2010 and 2011. As off 2015, spiral jetty is above
water and complete visible.
However,
Smithson died in a plane crash in Texas three years after finishing the spiral
jetty and has led to a controversy over the preservation of the sculpture. The
Utah state has owned the sculpture in 2011 due to exposure and growing number
of visitors. Though, it is expected that jetty will again disappear once the
drought is over. So, spiral jetty surfaced many times between 1970 and 2015 due
to lake-level fluctuations and survived robust wave erosion; the hard salt
crust maybe cemented the boulders together and provided a protective layer on
the jetty surface. Source: Charismatic Planet