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Uncommon ground: Land art in Britain 1966-1979

7 October 2013

To the National Museum of Wales, Cardiff (28 September to 5 January 2014), Mead Gallery, University of Warwick (18 January – 8 March 2014) and Longside Gallery, Yorkshire Sculpture Park (5 April to 15 June 2014). The exhibition features work by some of the most important British artists of the last 50 years including Tony Cragg, Barry Flanagan, Hamish Fulton, Antony Gormley, Richard Long and Anthony McCall and takes a fresh look at the art of this period and considers what was particular about the way Land Art developed in Britain.

Grass 1, 1967

In the late 1960s artists on both sides of the Atlantic turned away from the enclosed space of the gallery and went out into the landscape to forge a new form of art. This art was made in radically new ways often using earth, water, sun and even fire as raw materials, and went under several names: Land Art, earth art, process art, and conceptual art.

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