If you ask someone what they think makes art so special, they are likely to tell you that it is the creative aspect and the sensual aspect of art that makes
Artist James Brunt creatively uses nature as his materials and canvas.
If you ask someone what they think makes art so special, they are likely to tell you that it is the creative aspect and the sensual aspect of art that makes
Andy Goldsworthy is a British sculptor, renowned in his field, that creates temporary installations out of sticks and stones, and anything and everything else that he finds outside. The son of a mathematician, Goldsworthy grew up working on farms before eventually getting his BA from what is now the University of Central Lancashire. "A lot of my work is like picking potatoes," he told the Guardian. "You have to get into the rhythm of it."
Vous connaissez le land art ? Il s'agit d'une forme d'art, apparue à la fin des années 60, utilisant la nature à la fois comme cadre et comme composants de l'oeuvre. Par conséquent, la plupart des oeuvres ne sont qu'éphèmeres, uniquement immortalisées...
Jon Foreman discovered land art while in college and immediately fell in love with it. He felt that the natural world had more in it to be explored, particularly where he lives, Pembrokeshire, Wales.
Some of us bring the outdoors inside of our homes, offices and other buildings in the form of art that we have created or acquired and others make the world
If you ask someone what they think makes art so special, they are likely to tell you that it is the creative aspect and the sensual aspect of art that makes
Some of us bring the outdoors inside of our homes, offices and other buildings in the form of art that we have created or acquired and others make the world
Some of us bring the outdoors inside of our homes, offices and other buildings in the form of art that we have created or acquired and others make the world
A new book captures stunning works by an artist who uses nature, and his own body, as a medium
Since 1972, Bavarian artist Nils-Udo has worked directly with nature to create stunning, site-specific works of art that celebrate the beauty of the land.
Some of us bring the outdoors inside of our homes, offices and other buildings in the form of art that we have created or acquired and others make the world
Some of us bring the outdoors inside of our homes, offices and other buildings in the form of art that we have created or acquired and others make the world
Little Milford, Pembrokeshire
A new book captures stunning works by an artist who uses nature, and his own body, as a medium
If art is to be relevant to the environment, it needs to move beyond an art context to engage with the land itself.
(landart-creations.com)
If you ask someone what they think makes art so special, they are likely to tell you that it is the creative aspect and the sensual aspect of art that makes
Level Artist Julia Maximenko showed us how to create a magical forest using the Megascans/Unreal Engine 4 workflow.
Each extraordinary piece lasts for only a limited time as the tide usually wipes it out. But what a treat for a beach goer to come across one of these!
Turn nature into art with these amazing Andy Goldsworthy Art Projects for Kids! Get inspired to go out, pick up something & turn it into something beautiful!
Explore Teku Teku's 7657 photos on Flickr!
Over autumn and winter i’ve been out in the woods playing with natural materials.
Nagato Iwasaki is one of those artists you don't know much about. But his art talks for itself. The Japan-based artist creates incredible driftwood sculptures.
Explore LukeDHarrison's 18 photos on Flickr!
Focus sur le travail de Nils-Udo, un artiste plasticien allemand né en 1937, surtout connu pour ses projets de Land art, bien qu’il ait débuté sa carri
"Wasserspirale", Sep. 2018, im Butzbachtal bei Kordel a. d. Kyll
Mirror Logs is a series of exterior art installations designed by British art Lee Borthwick which use mirrors precision-cut to fit in-situ or placed logs to produce an unexpected, reflective and meditative experience for the viewer.
Nature is beautiful all on its own, it also provides amazing material for temporary art that adds to or shows appreciation for what Mother Nature has provided. Leaves, twigs, ….ApplesAndy Gol…
Le duo Christo et Jeanne-Claude, maîtres dans le domaine du Land Art, a réalisé une magnifique installation en 1983 : Surrounded Islands (ou « îles entour
Take a seat on one of Tanya Preminger’s grass-covered artworks, and you won’t be able to right the balance. The Isreal-based artist created immovable slants and indentations embedded in the land that seem like they should tip depending upon the amount of weight settled on either side. For each sloping piece, Preminger employed an excavator to dig a hole and pour the soil into a nearby pile. She then used a shovel, rake, and lengthy ruler to sculpt the slanted earth, covering it with sod at the end. More
La créative et spécialiste du land art, Jeanne Simmons, crée des costumes insolites 100% naturels pour ne faire qu'un avec l'environnement.
Some of us bring the outdoors inside of our homes, offices and other buildings in the form of art that we have created or acquired and others make the world
Autumn Beech, Anston Stones Wood, South Yorkshire - A3 Signed Giclee Print Signed Print only Shipped rolled in a tube for safe transport.
ANDY Goldsworthy reaches out his hand for me to touch. This is how we begin. Here on the page and there in the field. It's a soft September day in…
So it seems, even though our climate is warming we still have weather, and we are sure getting some in the UK at the moment. I saw a long term forecast in November and it said December would be colder than average, whilst January and February will be warmer. Unfortunately I am feeling pretty lazy at the mo' so I have not been making the most of the cold to get out and make something. Instead I'm enjoying getting out of bed late and spending all day eating mince pies. Nice work if you can get it. Anyway back to the weather. It is normally quite mild where I live, as on the west coast we are warmed by the atlantic. It was the coldest I'd seen it here, a few weeks ago, at minus 6 celcius. Nothing in the great scheme of things but if it is that cold here then eleswhere it will be really, really cold. Today it's been -2 all day so far, and I've not seen that before here either. So is it climate or is it simply weather? Apparently El Nina is having an affect and I wonder whether ash from the Icelandic volcano (I won't try and spell it) is cooling the temperatures over Europe? Even in my little brain there seem to be so many different variables when it comes to modelling our atmosphere and what it may drop upon us. It just brings it home to me even more, how something impossible to predict and understand could push it all out of sync and we might make this place uninhabitable for ourselves, let alone the polution and greed and waste we so palpably do understand and can predict and the affect that is having. I always scoff when I hear the phrase "save the planet." Let's face it if we weren't here at all, the planet would look after itself. We don't want to save the planet, we want to save ourselves. All this cold weather is not seducing me away from the mince pies though, although I did spend an hour walking around a tree creating a giant spiral in the snow, it was perhaps 100m across, fun but not very photogenic so there's no permanent record after the snow has melted. So I really should be making the most of the low temperatures. When I was on form making winter sculptures last year, I craved really low temperatures so I could get ice to stick to ice but it wasn't ever cold enough. I am trying to build up a head of steam though, but I do have the feeling once I get into first gear (I'm currently in neutral) that there may be a thaw. Still the choice is mine and land art and how I try to live my life are the same. It's all about going with the flow. When I create something I use what I find, I am guided by the elements and the temperature, the light and location all play a part. You cannot force it to be something that it isn't. It is the same for each and every one of us. It is always best to follow the line of least resistance. To listen to how you feel inside and accept it as good advice. If you want to run around like a loon then do so! If you want to hibernate surrounded by a circular wall of mince pies then so be it! So I don't mind feeling lazy, it is just the way it is. When will it change? Perhaps never! Anyway it is pretty obvious that there isn't much snow and ice in this picture. This was taken before the winter properly arrived. What the eagle eyed among you may realise is, this is actually this. I'd brought it home and left it in the garden and it had survived heavy rain, frost and gales for 27 days. It had blown around the garden quite a bit and I found it in a heap in one corner . All I wanted to do was recycle the thorns, that is why kept it and I was a bit taken aback to find it nearly intact. So I repaired it as best I could and went looking for a little, low winter sunshine. I watched as a branch cast a shadow across the leaves, drifting across the whole thing as our planet spun on its axis, like a windscreen wiper in hyper-slow. Everything is a cycle. Some quick, some slow. Everything is interconnected. Snow events, laziness, mince pies, enthusiasm and autumn leaves faded to brown in winter. Where something ends, something begins. And I wouldn't have it any other way.