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Showing posts with label Artists. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Artists. Show all posts

Sunday, April 1, 2012

Will Beckers

I ran across the work of Will Beckers the other day and really loved his work… it's similar in some ways to the work of Patrick Dougherty but it has a lot of it's own unique quality….

I think he's Dutch… or Belgian… in whichever case he speaks dutch so I can't really understand what he is saying in most of his videos about his work… but they are gorgeous even if I can't understand him lol...

Here's the blurb I found on his bio page off his website:

Will Beckers is an Art-in-Nature artist and sculptor, specialized in creating "green", living sculptures, and installations, using living organic material. Will has been working with "RAW" materials for the past 25 years. HIs love and respect for Nature started at a young age, he grew up in a family devoted to plant nurseries and floristry.

"I follow my passion by listening to the material, in this way art and nature are fused together. I interpret the processes of growth, life, metamorphose, decay, death and rebirth in my installation work."

An environmental artist - his work is an ode to Nature, he respects it and works in symbiosis with the natural world. His fascination with the macro world around us, is evident in his work. He challenges us to become aware of our surroundings, simple things we miss as we rush about our daily lives.

Will’s cradle to cradle environmental artwork; is often a living sculpture, growing organisms that stimulate us to challenge the relationship between individuals and our environment, he is confronting Nature with her own materials.

“I am a part-time artist, the other part of the time Nature does the work.” he says.

Will works with the local community, involving local children as an added ingredient to his land art projects. The children work with natural materials on location and are thus taken out of the comfort zone of the classroom, and their creativity is encouraged.

“Nature speaks its own language”, states Will, “This is a wonderful quote taken from a fascinating book, which I read when I was 14 and I have never forgotten it. From that moment on I knew I wanted to learn that language, now, so many years later, I am still following that same path; exploring, listening, seeing, but most important of all, learning from everything that grows and lives around us. We are part of Nature and her own language, there is an undeniable link. We should be speaking that language - the universal language.”

The exploitation and deprivation of man and the ever increasing gap between rich and poor around the globe, is mirrored in the exploitation and deprivation of nature and the our planet.

A sustainable way of life and improved living conditions on earth, can be assured with the reconciliation of mankind and the forging of a harmonious relationship between man and nature.

New forms of living can be achieved by solidarity between ourselves, and a sense of working in a community, in this way sustainable forms of life can evolve and new environmental technologies can become powerful tools to achieve this end. Working with natural materials in a positive, interactive, cooperative, and diverse way is the first step to making this a reality.




I couldn't find a lot of his work in a format I could post up here, but there are tons of images on his website…



Saturday, March 10, 2012

Andy Goldsworthy

Ever since I first saw his works, I have been slightly obsessed with Andy Goldsworthy. There is a sense of calm energy that runs through so many of his pieces that is energizing yet soothing at the same time. After watching Rivers and Tides I feel in love with him even more. I just love his attitude and his perspective on things, the way he feels his way through his environments and the sort of lighthearted goodnatured spirit he seems to have…. So after this interesting week of anxiety and stress I decided a little dose of Andy was exactly what I needed!















Really enjoyed this video interview done by the Tate Gallery… I could really just listen to him talk forever...:






When watching Rivers and Tides, I remember gasping at this part of the video… but in a way I also remember it making me feel really good inside that "real" artists have this sort of thing happen to them as well! I also think what he mentions about taking his works to the very edge of collapse is really beautiful as well…

Sunday, February 19, 2012

Jim Denevan

I stumbled onto Jim's work this week and was mesmerized by his ENORMOUS works of earth drawings. They are so graceful and elegant!

Earth:

In my searching I stumbled upon this video as well which I found fascinating. Not only does Jim seem to do amazing artwork but he organizes/designs community dinners where diners have a meal presented by a local farm outside in a field. It is a really interesting way to utilize his talents.

Saturday, February 11, 2012

Patrick Dougherty

I was in awe of Patrick Dougherty's work the moment I stumbled onto it... I just love how playful and whimsical and imaginative his pieces are!















Website: http://www.stickwork.net/
Interview: http://109.200.27.43/magazine/arts/patrick-dougherty-stickwork





Sunday, February 5, 2012

Richard Long - Land Artist

"Back in 1964, when Richard Long was 18, he went for a walk on the downs near his native Bristol. The countryside was covered in snow, and faced with a pristine expanse of silent whiteness, he began rolling a snowball through it. When the snowball became too big to push any further, Long took out his camera. He did not take a snapshot of the giant snowball; instead, he photographed the dark meandering track it had left in the snow. The ensuing image, one of his earliest works of what is now called land art, is named Snowball Track. Pure and simple. And, in its purity and simplicity, it denoted all that would follow...."

- Sean O'Hagan
The Observer, Saturday 9 May 2009




A LINE MADE BY WALKING

ENGLAND 1967



A LINE IN THE HIMALAYAS

1975



CIRCLE IN ALASKA
BERING STRAIT DRIFTWOOD ON THE ARCTIC CIRCLE 1977




HOGGAR CIRCLE
THE SAHARA 1988




DUSTY BOOTS LINE
THE SAHARA 1988

Nature Meets Museum:



STONE LINE (1980)
SCOTTISH NATIONAL GALLERY OF MODERN ART EDINBURGH 2007

photo by Thomas Bruns



BERLIN CIRCLE
HAMBURGER BAHNHOF BERLIN 2011



FIVE PATHS
GALERIA MÁRIO SEQUEIRA BRAGA PORTUGAL 2004

Artist's Website: http://www.richardlong.org/Sculptures/2011sculpupgrades/dusty.html
Wikipedia Entry: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Long_(artist)
Newspaper Article: http://www.guardian.co.uk/artanddesign/2009/may/10/art-richard-long