Permanent site-specific artworks were erected in the 1970s both in urban
sites and remote deserts in southwestern United States. None of these
artworks would have been possible without the support of private and
public funding, with the most influential being the Dia Art Foundation.
Dia, a non-profit organization, was founded in 1974 by the German art
dealer Heiner Friedrich in collaboration with Philippa de Menil, an
heiress to the Schlumberger OILfield services fortune. Works have been
realized by Walter De Maria, Dan Flavin, Donald Judd, Michael Heizer,
and James Turrell. The American desert underwent considerable change and
development, gradually becoming home to scientific research centers,
military installations and nuclear testing sites, as well as a hub of
artistic activity. The book focuses on the socio-political significance
of the site-specific art in which this multifunctional space is an
essential element. The physical and social context endows the works with
added values, turning them into visual signs of an alternative space.
The new space the works have created may well be dubbed a 'differential
space', as defined by the French sociologist and philosopher Henri
Lefebvre. They serve as a form of 'reparation', whereby the concrete
object is used to achieve repression through enchantment.