Heizer has since continued his exploration of the dynamics between positive forms and negative space. The culmination of this critical early period was the creation of Double Negative in 1969, a project for which he displaced 240,000 tons of rock in the Nevada desert, cutting two enormous trenches-each one 50-feet-deep and 30-feet-wide and together spanning 1,500 feet-at the eastern edge of Mormon Mesa near Overton, Nevada. In 1969, Heizer made the series Primitive Dye Paintings, in which white lime powder and concentrated aniline dyes were spread over the dry desert landscape, covering large areas that, when viewed from the air, formed amorphous, organic shapes. The following year Heizer completed Nine Nevada Depressions, a series of large negative sculptures located primarily on dry lakes throughout the state, Jean Dry Lake, Black Rock Desert and Massacre Dry Lake, near Vya, Nevada among them. Completed in 1967, North, East, South, West, consisted of several geometrically-shaped holes dug in the Sierra Nevada. These works were created by removing earth to shape subterranean negative forms directly into desert floor. In the late 1960s, Heizer left New York City for the deserts of California and Nevada, where he began making his first “negative” sculptures. The slate grey contours of U Painting (1975), for example, anticipate the shapes of the depressions and angular mounds that appear in his forthcoming project City. These hard-edged “displacement paintings” parallel the immense geometries he achieves when moving earth. In Trapezoid Painting (1966) and Track Painting (1967), he emphasizes the perimeters of raw canvases by painting them black, while the white interiors are perceived as negative spaces. Heizer began his artistic career in New York in 1966 with a series of geometric canvases painted with PVA latex. The paintings that would follow, characterized by non-traditionally shaped canvases, demonstrate Heizer’s early exploration of positive and negative forms such harmonies of presence and absence, matter and space, are essential to his art. He currently lives and works in Hiko, Nevada and New York City. A pioneer of 20th century Land Art or earthworks movement he is widely recognized for sculptures and environmental structures made with earth-moving equipment, which he began creating in the American West in 1967. Working largely outside the confines of the traditional art spaces of galleries and museums, Heizer has redefined sculpture in terms of size, mass, gesture, and process. Michael Heizer (born 1944) is a land artist specializing in large-scale and site-specific sculptures.
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