English Language Hardcover Edition: 21 x 41 cm. 48 pages. Very good condition apart from label removed from front free endpaper. Complete with very good dustjacket.
In 1989, Andy Goldsworthy created four massive snow rings at one the most remote place on Planet Earth, the North Pole. These ephemeral sculptures marked the position of the North Pole and were built around it. Through any of the four sculptures, the direction will always be south. The material was cut and built in the white on white environment. The artist learned snow-cutting and packing techniques from a traditional indigenous source, an Inuit based in the Ellesmere Island, Canada’s third-largest island, the 10th-largest island in the world and the most northerly island in the Arctic Archipelago.
In winter 1989, before leaving for the North Pole, he wrote:
It belongs to no one — it is the Earth’s common — an ever-changing landscape in which whatever I make will soon disappear.
This ephemeral artwork was created at the North Pole in 1989 and was designed to naturally disappear due to environmental conditions. It no longer exists in its original form.