gordon.coale
 
Home
 


Weblog Archives

   
 
  Sunday  January 14  2007    01: 32 PM

movie recommendation



Rivers & Tides:
Working with Time

Andy Goldsworthy

Marja-Leena turned me on to this one. I've been a fan of Goldworthy for some time. His work in ephemeral sculpture is breathtaking. He is almost as much photographer as sculpture since it is only with photography that much of his work can be seen. His work with rock is also amazing. This DVD shows him at work (it sure looks more like play) and we are also able to see the dynamic qualities of some of his work. It's amazing watching him going for a walk and stopping to pick bright yellow flowers and then, at the end of his walk, arrange them in nature to make a thing of beauty that will, in hours or days, vanish. You must see this. From Amazon:


Andy Goldsworthy's Rivers and Tides is a truly beautiful, Scottish-German 2001 documentary about artist Goldsworthy, a Scotsman whose medium is nature itself and whose preferred studio is the outdoors, particularly where water forever flows, rises, and/or retreats. The soft-spoken, secluded Goldsworthy is seen hard at work making ephemeral sculptures out of bits of ice in the trees, or building tall, mysterious cones from loose rock, which stand like spiritual sentinels in forests and on shorelines, overgrown by plants or swallowed daily by high tides. Filmmaker-cinematographer Thomas Reidelsheimer goes to great and sometimes inexplicable lengths to make visual corollaries to Goldsworthy's ideas about underappreciated relationships between light, color, movement, balance, and fluidity of form in the real world, making Rivers and Tides a lively and always surprising cinematic gallery. Some of Goldsworthy's most miraculous natural installations--stone walls that snake through hundreds of feet of forest and stream, for instance--show up in the last half-hour.




Andy Goldsworthy
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia



Image search with Google


[more]