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The terms earth art and earthworks are usually restricted to very large works, such as Smithson's Spiral Jetty, a road of earth and rocks about 450 m/1,480 ft long, running out into the Great Salt Lake, Utah. He also made much smaller works, including heaps of rocks and soil displayed in galleries. Smithson died in a plane crash when he was surveying one of his large works. As this suggests, some of the larger works of Land art can only be properly appreciated from the air. Critics point out that this undermines the movement's original intention that art should be for everyone, not just the rich few, as only those who own or can hire an aeroplane are likely to see the artwork in the original. Because of the size and location of many pieces of Land art, works are often presented as photographs.
Other methods and examples include work by Nancy Holt who built enormous structures similar to the megalithic monument Stonehenge, that were organized according to the astronomical order of the stars. The work of Christo usually involves wrapping natural or artificial objects (sometimes very large ones such as Parisian bridges and entire islands); some, however, regard his work as too personal to be described as Land art.
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