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Julian Calder

  • Arts & Culture

35 Who Made a Difference: Andy Goldsworthy

Using nature as his canvas, the artist creates works of transcendent beauty

  • By Arthur Lubow
  • Smithsonian magazine, November 2005

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    On a typical autumn day, Andy Goldsworthy can be found in the woods near his home in Penpont, Scotland, maybe cloaking a fallen tree branch with a tapestry of yellow and brown elm leaves, or, in a rainstorm, lying on a rock until the dry outline of his body materializes as a pale shadow on the moist surface. Come winter, he might be soldering icicles into glittering loops or star bursts with his bare fingers. Because he works outdoors with natural materials, Goldsworthy is sometimes portrayed as a modern Druid; really, he is much closer to a latter-day Impressionist. Like those 19th-century painters, he is obsessed with the way sunlight falls and flickers, especially on stone, water and leaves. Monet—whose painting of a sunrise gave the Impressionist movement its name—used oil paint to reveal light's transformative power in his series of canvases of haystacks, the Rouen Cathedral and the Houses of Parliament. Goldsworthy is equally transfixed with the magical effect of natural light. Only he has discovered another, more elemental way to explore it.

    As a fine arts student at Preston Polytechnic in northern England, Goldsworthy, now 49, disliked working indoors. He found escape nearby at Morecambe Bay, where he began constructing temporary structures that the incoming tide would collapse. Before long, he realized that his artistic interests were tied more closely to his youthful agricultural labors in Yorkshire than to life classes and studio work. The balanced boulders, snow arches and leaf-rimmed holes that he crafted were his versions of the plein-air sketches of landscape artists. Instead of representing the landscape, however, he was drawing on the landscape itself.

    Throughout the 20th century, artists struggled with the dilemma of Modernism: how to convey an experience of the real world while acknowledging the immediate physical reality of the materials—the two-dimensional canvas, the viscous paint—being used in the representation. Goldsworthy has cut his way clear. By using the landscape as his material, he can illustrate aspects of the natural world—its color, mutability, energy—without resorting to mimicry. Although he usually works in rural settings, his definition of the natural world is expansive. "Nature for me isn't the bit that stops in the national parks," he says. "It's in a city, in a gallery, in a building. It's everywhere we are."

    Goldsworthy's principal artistic debt is to "Land Art," an American movement of the 1960s that took Pollock's and de Kooning's macho Abstract Expressionism out of the studio to create giant earthworks such as Robert Smithson's Spiral Jetty in the Great Salt Lake of Utah or Michael Heizer's Double Negative in Nevada. Unlike Smithson and Heizer, however, Goldsworthy specializes in the ephemeral. A seven-foot-long ribbon of red poppy petals that he stuck together with saliva lasted just long enough to be photographed before the wind carried it off. His leaves molder, his ice arabesques melt. One work in which he took special joy, a sort of bird's nest of sticks, was intended to evoke a tidal whirlpool; when the actual tide carried it into the water, its creator marveled as it gyrated toward destruction. The moment was captured in Rivers and Tides, a documentary film by Thomas Riedelsheimer that portrayed Goldsworthy at work and underscored the centrality of time to his art.

    Even those stone stacks and walls that he intends to last for a long time are conceived in a very different spirit from the bulldozing Land Art of the American West. An endearing humility complements his vast ambition. "There are occasions when I have moved boulders, but I'm reluctant to, especially ones that have been rooted in a place for many years," he says, noting that when he must do so, he looks "for ones on the edge of a field that had been pulled out of the ground by farming. The struggle of agriculture, of getting nourishment from the earth, becomes part of the story of the boulder and of my work."

    The modesty in his method is matched by a realism in his demands. He knows that nothing can or should last forever. Once a piece has been illuminated by the perfect light or been borne away by the serendipitous wave, he gratefully bids it a fond farewell.

    On a typical autumn day, Andy Goldsworthy can be found in the woods near his home in Penpont, Scotland, maybe cloaking a fallen tree branch with a tapestry of yellow and brown elm leaves, or, in a rainstorm, lying on a rock until the dry outline of his body materializes as a pale shadow on the moist surface. Come winter, he might be soldering icicles into glittering loops or star bursts with his bare fingers. Because he works outdoors with natural materials, Goldsworthy is sometimes portrayed as a modern Druid; really, he is much closer to a latter-day Impressionist. Like those 19th-century painters, he is obsessed with the way sunlight falls and flickers, especially on stone, water and leaves. Monet—whose painting of a sunrise gave the Impressionist movement its name—used oil paint to reveal light's transformative power in his series of canvases of haystacks, the Rouen Cathedral and the Houses of Parliament. Goldsworthy is equally transfixed with the magical effect of natural light. Only he has discovered another, more elemental way to explore it.

    As a fine arts student at Preston Polytechnic in northern England, Goldsworthy, now 49, disliked working indoors. He found escape nearby at Morecambe Bay, where he began constructing temporary structures that the incoming tide would collapse. Before long, he realized that his artistic interests were tied more closely to his youthful agricultural labors in Yorkshire than to life classes and studio work. The balanced boulders, snow arches and leaf-rimmed holes that he crafted were his versions of the plein-air sketches of landscape artists. Instead of representing the landscape, however, he was drawing on the landscape itself.

    Throughout the 20th century, artists struggled with the dilemma of Modernism: how to convey an experience of the real world while acknowledging the immediate physical reality of the materials—the two-dimensional canvas, the viscous paint—being used in the representation. Goldsworthy has cut his way clear. By using the landscape as his material, he can illustrate aspects of the natural world—its color, mutability, energy—without resorting to mimicry. Although he usually works in rural settings, his definition of the natural world is expansive. "Nature for me isn't the bit that stops in the national parks," he says. "It's in a city, in a gallery, in a building. It's everywhere we are."

    Goldsworthy's principal artistic debt is to "Land Art," an American movement of the 1960s that took Pollock's and de Kooning's macho Abstract Expressionism out of the studio to create giant earthworks such as Robert Smithson's Spiral Jetty in the Great Salt Lake of Utah or Michael Heizer's Double Negative in Nevada. Unlike Smithson and Heizer, however, Goldsworthy specializes in the ephemeral. A seven-foot-long ribbon of red poppy petals that he stuck together with saliva lasted just long enough to be photographed before the wind carried it off. His leaves molder, his ice arabesques melt. One work in which he took special joy, a sort of bird's nest of sticks, was intended to evoke a tidal whirlpool; when the actual tide carried it into the water, its creator marveled as it gyrated toward destruction. The moment was captured in Rivers and Tides, a documentary film by Thomas Riedelsheimer that portrayed Goldsworthy at work and underscored the centrality of time to his art.

    Even those stone stacks and walls that he intends to last for a long time are conceived in a very different spirit from the bulldozing Land Art of the American West. An endearing humility complements his vast ambition. "There are occasions when I have moved boulders, but I'm reluctant to, especially ones that have been rooted in a place for many years," he says, noting that when he must do so, he looks "for ones on the edge of a field that had been pulled out of the ground by farming. The struggle of agriculture, of getting nourishment from the earth, becomes part of the story of the boulder and of my work."

    The modesty in his method is matched by a realism in his demands. He knows that nothing can or should last forever. Once a piece has been illuminated by the perfect light or been borne away by the serendipitous wave, he gratefully bids it a fond farewell.


     
    Comments

    my daughter hs been studying this "art" at school and I can only laugh, art? you decide

    Posted by dean thomas on December 3,2007 | 10:38AM

    Please don't be so quick to dismiss Mr. Goldsworthy or your daughter. I believe that if you allow yourself to be open to what your daughter sees in this art you may come to view the world differently.

    Posted by E.Endicott on January 5,2008 | 07:09PM

    Andy is inspirational with natural materials. I work with under fives and would welcome his input to inspire the young children I work with, many from vulnerable backgrounds. Many of the young children have no opportunity to experience natural materials with the pleasure of outdoor experiences of play, feeling free and connected to the natural world. Where I work has a blank, bland outdoor canvas. My plea is ANDY CAN YOU HELP ME?

    Posted by anna shaw on February 3,2008 | 03:20PM

    Non permanent, non intrusive and non pollutant. What a way to go. Andy is inspirational and I think more people should get closer to nature in all facets of life. As an ephemeral artist, I also like the fact that there is no storage problems with regard to collections or unsold work. I would love to accompany Andy on a project and spend time to learn more about this kind of sculpting. Hayley

    Posted by hayley on February 10,2008 | 07:39PM

    I find Andy to be inspirational not only because he can use the natural resources that the Earth has provided him with to create some of the most beautiful things that many of us have ever seen, but a lot of the things that he makes will ultimately be destroyed by nature itself and the fact that he knows that and he continues to make the things he does makes him as inspirational as he does.

    Posted by Shelby on February 22,2008 | 11:16AM

    I am dismayed at the air of disregard in one of the previous comments toward Goldsworthy's work and the idea of it being studied by others (children, in this case; according to the comment). As an introduction to Mr. Goldsworthy's work I often ask my students to consider their motivation for designing and building a snowman or sandcastle. 'Why,' I ask, 'would you spend your time (hours, often), your thought and energy crafting something that you know is ephemeral?' The answers these 7th graders provide are a clear validation of this type of art. They range from the practical ("To pass the time doing something constructive.") to the playful ("To enjoy nature and our surroundings while with friends.") to the philosophical and aesthetic ("To create something 'awesome' with our own hands and be proud of our accomplishment of a job well done") Of course, not everyone responds positively to every type of art, but I feel that a creation which exudes good craftsmanship, integrity, determination and aesthetic sense, in addition to one that others view with genuine interest, could be judged less harshly.

    Posted by Paige on February 29,2008 | 05:47PM

    I agree with Paige, who is to say he isn't an artist. Dean Thomas must learn to CRITIQUE art and not CRITICIZE it- otherwise you are just wasting words. Say something meaningful that conveys your opinion, not something mean.

    Posted by KK on March 15,2008 | 06:04PM

    I don't know much about art, but wouldn't he be a sculptor?

    Posted by Julian Shaw on March 31,2008 | 06:50PM

    And is a sculptor not an artist then?

    Posted by Jeanette Everson on April 6,2008 | 05:52AM

    What a shame that Mr. Thomas doesn't appreciate or understand Andy Goldsworthy's ART, or maybe even nature itself. I fortunately live near the Yorkshire sculpture park and had the good fortune to visit his recent exhibition there, 3 times, because i enjoyed it that much. If you get the chance Mr. Thomas, please take your daughter to see his work next time he's around, it was an amazing experience also for my friend's and family.

    Posted by Sharon Harrison on April 9,2008 | 04:34AM

    To understand Andy through his own words and works please watch the film "Rivers and Tides". He is absolutely driven and consumed with creating in all kinds of outdoor environments. I have a love for the woodlands, streams, and seashores and for me Andy interprets the pattern and the "river of life" that I sensed was there but could not see until I was introduced to it through his work.

    Posted by Pam Laster on April 26,2008 | 07:30PM

    I seriously think that andy Golsworthy is amazing, im doing an assignment on him at school and wow, his works are just great hes just so original in all of the work that he does, he truely is fantastic!a true artist of originality, ive never see work like this before especially in urban and natural places! its just great, keep up the awesome work Andy, and to all who are reading this, JESUS LOVES YOU! :)

    Posted by yabby on May 17,2008 | 09:17PM

    Yew! :)

    Posted by Lenny jam on May 17,2008 | 09:18PM

    My daughter (Bulgarian) wrote her MA Thesis in History of Arts on Andy Goldsworthy's outdoor inventions, and it was not only very successful at the Berlin University, where she defended it, but was also translated and published in Bulgaria's unique World Art Events Magazine "LIK". People in Bulgaria tend to appreciate art in nature, as most of them are tought from pre-school that Nature is sublime Art. I deeply respectful and indebted to Mr. Goldsworthy. Mariana Melnishka, free-lance art reviewer

    Posted by Mariana Melnishka on June 9,2008 | 03:58AM

    i am a school student in yr 8 and i am studying andy goldsworthy for a school assignment. i really do think that he is a very creative artist/sculptor(?) his works are really quite fantastic!

    Posted by Jacinda on June 18,2008 | 02:54AM

    I am a college student and i have been doing research to answer a question that i had about Andy Goldsworthy's artwork. I need/want to know why he puts black holes and circles in his art in the video called "Autumn Works". I would really like to know the answer, please email me soon!

    Posted by Julz San Martino on September 23,2008 | 05:31PM

    it is definitely art! and it is definitely incredible. he is a creative man who possesses a huge amount of talent. i certainly couldnt do anything like that and im sure not many other people could as well as have the will to continue and to start again if he failed and his work, for example, if it collapsed. how can anyone not be impressed and inspired by his work. we are learning about him at school this year (year 10) and im so glad we are!

    Posted by Hannah on September 29,2008 | 09:43PM

    Im in my first year in college studying art and design and we just been studying about Andy. I do love his work and i think it might have influenced me on my own peaces later on. I just thinks his work in amazing.

    Posted by Scarlet on October 5,2008 | 03:10AM

    hello there andy, i am james and i am studying your work in our CCSE art lessons. I find your work calming and quite exciting some times. keep up the good work james :)

    Posted by james clifton on October 20,2008 | 06:47AM

    the black holes are symbolic of death and decay

    Posted by luce on November 5,2008 | 11:42AM

    Andy Goldsworthy has more than likely put more time in making his art work than he has sleeping. I am doing a school powerpoint on him for my Art History class. I have tried to make a replica of his stone pyramid out of lego's and it was not easy. Andy Goldsworthy did that out of rock plates that could of easly slipped and fell and made the whole project collapse. Cut him some slack guys.

    Posted by Adam on November 14,2008 | 10:48AM

    In looking at Goldsworthy at work, I am transported back to a time in childhood where I marvelled at all things in nature and was able to see the rainbow light substance underlying all creation- I remember saying to myself then, I never want to forget this way of seeing, as I knew the "grown-ups" around me, had forgotten.I never lost my connection and feel akin to Andy as he brings it into remebrance for us all.I too appreciate the fact that he leaves a gentle footprint with his work. I feel the richness of our life experience can be measured by how we maintain our personal connection to glorious Mother Nature.

    Posted by deborah phillips on November 15,2008 | 09:45AM

    I like most of Andy's work but some I find a little boring. I particularly like the arches and walls but it is everyone's own taste and like others I am also searching for inspiration for college and Andy keeps providing it. Hope to see some of the pieces in situ some time and hope he continues to build (create)his work for a long time to come.

    Posted by Christine on December 17,2008 | 02:17PM

    it's inspiring how andy allows the destruction of his work and actually encorporates it in the creation of his sculptures. i've tried to put this tolerance into practice within my own work, allowing things beyond my control to add to the piece rather than ruin it.

    Posted by jenny smith on December 26,2008 | 08:33AM

    To question whether Andy Goldworthy's work is art is absolutely ludicrous, and anyone who would do so is either beyond snobbery or is so firmly locked into stereotypical definitions of what "art" (love the quotes at the start of this thread) is supposed to be that they've allowed their thinking to calcify completely. I can't think of a level on which they don't succeed. They are often both strikingly beautiful and intensely cerebral - that those two ends can be acheived so eloquently is proof of the highest artistry. And to think that they succeed as photographs alone, nevermind as pieces of performance art that change completely through changing light / seasons / time, only makes their execution more praiseworthy. Thank you, Mr. Goldsworthy - your work is totally inspiring.

    Posted by Frank Reilly on January 25,2009 | 02:02AM

    i am a student in year ten and i am currently studying photography as a elective. We have been asked to do a Bibliography on him and also questions on certain art-pieces we have found in which he has created, i was at first reluctant to do this assignment as i thought it would just be another waste of time as although i love photography i am more of a hands on person as opposed to a written artist, but viewing (and reading about) Andy Goldsworthy's work has been inpirational and i suddenly feel the motivational pull towards creating my very own urban or environmental based masterpiece. He has done a wonderful job with all of his artwork and i look forward to hopefully viewing one of his exhibits on the future. What a magnificant artist.

    Posted by A.Waterman on February 1,2009 | 12:42AM

    i am just doing a school art project and choose mr andy goldsworthy, i have picked one of his sculptures BIRD IN SPACE i really need to know when he made made this piece as i need it for my essay Many thanks samuel

    Posted by samuel green on March 2,2009 | 09:19AM

    andy goldsworthy's artworks are awesome! :]

    Posted by venessa on March 11,2009 | 11:14PM

    Andy Goldsworthy is an amazing, incredible, awesome artist. I chose him for my year ten art assignment which i am currently working on because of his inspiring talent and magnificent masterpieces. He is exceptional and I have loved learning about him.

    Posted by tash on March 16,2009 | 01:37AM

    Very cool, tacking nurture to make art. I think that this is so cool. Keep it up Andy Goldsworthy.

    Posted by on May 13,2009 | 06:52AM

    I think Andy is a great artist i think it is the coolest thing that he works with nature. Nature is already beautiful but he really brings out the true colors. im very inspired by what he dose. KEEP UP THE GREAT WORK!!:]

    Posted by sam on May 15,2009 | 04:41PM

    im a year 10 student, and we have to do an in class essay about "how Andy Goldsworthy represents and interperates organic forms (from nature) into his artworks" before reading this site i had absolutily no idea. but now i can really see the imaginatve side of his beautiful artworks. nature is already eautiful, but its just harder for some to se it, however with people like Andy Goldsworthy in the world it becomes possible for everyone to imagine, and for once in their lives, stop and enjoy. :)
    Andy you are an inspiration to us all. thank you

    Posted by brooke :) on May 27,2009 | 02:36AM

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