andy goldsworthy: sculptor, photographer, environmentalist

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Andy Goldsworthy: Sculptor, Photographer, Environmentalist

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Page 1: Andy Goldsworthy: Sculptor, Photographer, Environmentalist

Andy Goldsworthy: Sculptor, Photographer, Environmentalist

Page 2: Andy Goldsworthy: Sculptor, Photographer, Environmentalist

Using an endless range of natural materials—snow, ice, flowers, leaves, icicles, mud, pine-cones, stones, twigs, thorns, bark, rock, clay, feathers,

petals, twigs—Andy Goldsworthy creates outdoor sculptures that are usually transient that disappear shortly after creation.

Page 3: Andy Goldsworthy: Sculptor, Photographer, Environmentalist

Goldsworthy works almost exclusively with his hands even sometimes his teeth or “found tools in nature” to build his sculptures.

Page 4: Andy Goldsworthy: Sculptor, Photographer, Environmentalist

His work is almost always temporary and almost always done outdoors lasting minutes, a few days, or weeks decaying or changing in the environment.

Page 5: Andy Goldsworthy: Sculptor, Photographer, Environmentalist

His documents all his work through his photographs which record how his sculptures change and and the effects of time in nature.

Page 6: Andy Goldsworthy: Sculptor, Photographer, Environmentalist

Permanent Installations: Storm King Art CenterCornwall, NY

Page 7: Andy Goldsworthy: Sculptor, Photographer, Environmentalist

Purchase CollegePurchase, NY

Page 8: Andy Goldsworthy: Sculptor, Photographer, Environmentalist

National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C. Slate Sculpture entitled “Roof”

Page 9: Andy Goldsworthy: Sculptor, Photographer, Environmentalist

Park Presidio in San Francisco

Page 10: Andy Goldsworthy: Sculptor, Photographer, Environmentalist

Giant Snowballs in London: In June of 2000, Goldsworthy transplanted 13 snowballs each weighing a ton which had been kept in freezers throughout the streets of London. As they melted, pebbles, pine combs, and chalk and other materials from the Scottish countryside

were revealed within!