Richard Long, in Artist Rooms
It had been a while since I saw any of Richard Long's work so I was pleased to see this very small exhibition in one of the Artist's Rooms at Tate Modern during our last visit there.
One of the main proponents of Land Art, Long has been making art by walking since the late 1960s. Through the simple creative act of moving through the landscape, Long extends the possibilities of sculpture to explore ideas of place, time and distance. His walks, and the sculptures made along the way - water poured on a rock, a path trodden in the earth, the rearrangement of scattered stones and sticks - are recorded through photographs, maps and text works.
Long has made work on all seven continents, walking in some of the remotest landscapes on earth. Rooted in his deep affinity with nature, his radical approach to art and the language of sculpture has made him a vital influence on a generation of artists.
'My work really is just about being a human living on this planet and using nature as its source... I enjoy the simple pleasures of wellbeing, independence, opportunism, freedom, dreaming and happenstance; of passing through the land and sometimes stopping to leave (memorable) traces along the way'.
For this post, I have concentrated on the indoor sculptures which develop these same ideas, made from natural materials like stoness, bit of wood, or tidal mud applied with his hands or feet. 'I am interested in universals: stones, water, mud, hands, days, symmetry, gravity'.
'A circle outdoors is part of the place it is in, sometimes as far as the eyes can see, while indoors the circle and materials demand more attention.
looking closer
'The mud works are another aspect of the physicality of my work, like the walking. I always have a precise idea of the overall form of the work, which is balanced by the spontaneity of the execution. The speed of my hand is important because that's waht makes the splashes, which show the wateriness of the mud, and water is the main subject and content of these works, they show its nature. I make the top half of the image, and nature - gravity - makes the other half'.
'I like the fact that every stone is different, one from another, in the same way all fingerprints, or snowflakes, or places are unique, so no two circles can be alike'.
looking closer
South Bank Circle, 1991, (Delabole slate)
'I like the idea that my A Line in the Himalayas... made on the Khumbu Glacier below the Everest icefall, the sculpture would be on the move, slowly disintegrating and disappearing down the moraine, as soon as I had made it. It is not my intention to make monumental or permanent works on a walk'.
To see more of Richard Long's art in this blog you can go:
here for Seven Days Walking on Mount Olympus
here for Uncommon Ground
and here for the Athens Slate Line