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Creativity Quote by Robert Smithson

"Nature does not proceed in a straight line, it is rather a sprawling development"

About this Quote

Straight lines are a human fantasy: efficient, legible, obedient. Smithson’s jab at linearity isn’t just botanical wisdom; it’s a critique of the modern urge to neaten the world into progress charts, master plans, and museum-ready narratives. “Sprawling development” is doing double duty here. It evokes actual geologic and ecological growth - messy, entropic, full of detours - while also naming the cultural sprawl of late-industrial America: suburbs, highways, extraction sites, the “new” landscape built on churn and spoil.

Smithson, a key Land Art figure, worked in and against that churn. By the late 1960s and early 1970s, as Minimalism prized clean geometry and high-modernist architecture sold utopia in right angles, he gravitated to quarries, salt flats, and dumps: places where nature and industry were already collaborating. His most famous gesture, Spiral Jetty, literally rejects the straight line in favor of a coil that feels both ancient and provisional, made to be eroded, submerged, revealed again. The point isn’t that nature is “organic” and therefore good; it’s that time doesn’t behave like our diagrams.

The subtext is anti-teleological: no final form, no guaranteed improvement, no moral arc that tidies history. “Proceed” suggests intention, and Smithson undercuts it, implying that what we call development is often drift - accumulation, collapse, remake. For an artist obsessed with entropy, that sprawl is not a problem to solve. It’s the real medium.

Quote Details

TopicNature
Source
Verified source: Cultural Confinement (Robert Smithson, 1972)
Text match: 98.57%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Nature does not proceed in a straight line, it is rather a sprawling development. Nature is never finished. (p. 39). Primary-source location for the quote is Robert Smithson’s own text “Cultural Confinement,” published in Artforum (October 1972). A finding aid/collection guide from Kent State University Libraries lists the specific Artforum citation as: Artforum, v. 11, no. 2 (October 1972), p. 39. The Holt/Smithson Foundation also republishes the text and provides a citation to Artforum (October, 1972). Evidence also indicates the statement was written for documenta 5 (Kassel, 1972) and first published there in German in the documenta 5 catalogue (often cited as section 17, p. 74), prior to the Artforum English publication; however, I did not retrieve a scan of the original 1972 documenta binder page to transcribe the German text and confirm exact placement beyond those secondary bibliographic references.
Other candidates (1)
Robert Smithson (Robert Smithson, 1996) compilation95.0%
The Collected Writings Robert Smithson Jack D. Flam. tive , abstracted , safe , and politically lobotomized it ... Na...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Smithson, Robert. (2026, February 19). Nature does not proceed in a straight line, it is rather a sprawling development. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/nature-does-not-proceed-in-a-straight-line-it-is-164932/

Chicago Style
Smithson, Robert. "Nature does not proceed in a straight line, it is rather a sprawling development." FixQuotes. February 19, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/nature-does-not-proceed-in-a-straight-line-it-is-164932/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Nature does not proceed in a straight line, it is rather a sprawling development." FixQuotes, 19 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/nature-does-not-proceed-in-a-straight-line-it-is-164932/. Accessed 7 Mar. 2026.

More Quotes by Robert Add to List
Nature Does Not Proceed in a Straight Line: Smithson on Sprawling Growth
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About the Author

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Robert Smithson (January 2, 1938 - July 20, 1973) was a Artist from USA.

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