At the end of the last Ice Age, water flowing
from the eastern Sierra created a lush lake and river system
stretching from Mono Lake to Death Valley. Suggestions of
this ancient watershed survive as a series of dry lakebeds
connected by the now dry Owens River. The drier post-Ice Age
climate transformed this region into the spectacular desert
we know today as Owens Valley and Death Valley.
Offered by Stanford University's Continuing
Education department in the spring of 2000, From Mono Lake to Death Valley
was a lecture/field workshop to re-imagine and trace this
ancient lake and river system with a series of land-art works
created during a four-day field trip. The course included
Sierra geologic history, a survey of major land-art practitioners,
and a field trip, during which site-specific installations
were created at compelling locations along the water's ancient
pathway.
This course was taught by Stanford geology
professor, Elizabeth Miller, PhD, and artists Jim Mason and Mark Brest van Kempen.
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