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Richard Long, who studied
at the West of England College of Art in Bristol and at St. Martin’s
School of Art, London, was born in 1945 in Bristol, where he still
resides. Initially, Long’s work was associated with the international
Earth
Art movement of the late 1960s. Whether made
in England or abroad, his work may take the forms of walks, stone
and stick sculptures, photographs, maps, texts, artists’ books,
or mud wall works. Using simple, elementary forms—lines, circles,
or spirals—Long’s earthbound, floor-hugging sculptures
have an unobtrusive, contemplative presence. Even as his work has
moved indoors, to museums and galleries, it retains that sense of
impermanence while referring back to his walks on the earth—in
the materials that he uses and in the random or precise forms encountered,
employed, and discovered.
Richard Long, who travels widely, records his walks through nature
by temporarily marking the land in some way. The artist often uses
geometric forms to make his human mark upon the landscape: he has
made circles of stone or has trodden down grasses so that his path
along a straight line may be seen. Because these marks are temporary,
Long documents the results through photographs. In other works, such
as Baja California Circle, the artist has removed elements
from a particular environment he has encountered in his travels and
created a memory of that place in the gallery setting. Long creates
simple geometric forms like lines, circles or spirals, using natural
materials.
While visiting the San Diego countryside in 1989, Long selected granite
stones originating from Baja California and placed them on the gallery
floor in a circle 14 feet in diameter. Long’s physical interaction
with his work is very important to his art making. In a way, he is
re-creating his experiences with the land on his own human,
physical
scale , which is tiny in comparison to the
scale of the landscape.

(For Grades K-2)
What materials did the artist use in this sculpture?
If you touched this sculpture, how do you think it would feel?
If you were going to create a sculpture using materials found in the environment,
what materials would you use? What would it look like?
(For Grades 4-6)
What materials did the artist use in this sculpture?
What is unusual about the way this sculpture is displayed?
How do you think this sculpture is installed in the museum? Do you
think it looks the same every time it is shown?
Have you ever used natural materials to create a sculpture?
What materials found in nature could you use?
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Richard Long
England, born 1945
Baja California Circle
Baja La Creste granite, 1989
Museum purchase with funds from the Elizabeth W. Russell Foundation
1989.4
© Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego
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Explore Art page
(kid-friendly) |
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