Snow Wall, Ellesmere Island
Artist
Andy Goldsworthy
(British, born 1956)
CultureEnglish
Date1989
MediumCibachrome photograph
DimensionsOverall, Frame: 42 3/4 × 43 in. (108.6 × 109.2 cm)
Credit LineGift of Renée and Paul Mansheim
Object number2011.13.1A
Not on view
DescriptionThe work consists of two framed cibachrome photographs. The larger image depicts a snow sculpture created by the artist and the smaller one, called the site-image, depicts the surrounding terrainLabel TextAndy Goldsworthy British, b. 1956 Snow Wall, Ellesmere Island, 1989 Snow Wall, Ellesmere Island (In Situ Perspective), 1989 Cibachrome prints (photographs) Andy Goldsworthy carved Snow Wall on Ellesmere Island in the Canadian Arctic in 1989, and by now the sculpture has probably disappeared. The artist often makes sculptures from organic materials like sticks, leaves, stones, and snow, then documents his work with photographs before the work decays. Goldsworthy says his photographs capture the sculpture “at its heights, marking the moment when the work is most alive… Process and decay are implicit.” With this sensitivity to a work’s transience, Goldsworthy’s sculptures resist the seemingly timeless quality of the white-walled museum or gallery. Gifts of Renée and Paul Mansheim 2011.13.1a–bProvenance?; Springer & Winckler Gallery, Berlin; purchased by Paul and Renee Mansheim, 2006; gift to Chrysler Museum of Art, 2011Exhibition History"Remix Redux: A Fresh Mix For Our Modern And Contemporary Galleries," Chrysler Museum of Art, Norfolk, Virginia, August 15 - December 30, 2012.Published ReferencesAndy Goldsworthy, Touching North (London, 1989).
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