BEVERLY BUCHANAN: MARSH RUINS by Amelia Groom
with a presentation of research materials
Wednesday November 3, 8pmBeverly Buchanan’s Marsh Ruins (1981) are large, solid mounds of cement and shell-based tabby concrete, yet their presence has always been elusive. Hiding in the tall grasses and brackish waters of the Marshes of Glynn, on the southeast coast of Georgia, the Marsh Ruins merge with their surroundings as they enact a curious and delicate tension between destruction and endurance. This volume offers an illustrated examination of Buchanan’s environmental sculpture, which exists in an ongoing state of ruination.
Amelia Groom illuminates Buchanan’s vision of sculptural ruination, and probes her remarkable work in terms of ideas of witnessing, documentation, landscape, and cultural memory. Existing in dialogue with land art and postminimalist sculpture, the Marsh Ruins are nevertheless unique refusals of art world classifications and systems of value. Making abstract use of concrete forms, Buchanan’s works embody their own stakes, from colonialism’s legacies of fracture and dislocation, to the workings of weather and time. In the words of her own mother, Buchanan had always “seen things” in rocks that others didn’t see.
In this informal presentation, Amelia Groom will share materials related to her research for the book, focusing in particular on Buchanan’s abandoned outdoor stone pieces, which were often left in secret or hidden locations.
Amelia Groom is a Berlin-based writer and art historian. She holds a postdoctoral research position in the Laboratory for Art Research at the The Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts in Copenhagen. She is working on a collection of essays on the politics and poetics of silence, as well as a long-term project that engages with gossip and rumour as queer-feminist epistemologies.