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Midsummer snowballs

By: Goldsworthy, AndyPublisher: Thames & Hudson, 2001001: 7570ISBN: 0500510652DDC classification: 730.942 GOL
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Item type Current library Collection Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book MAIN LIBRARY Book PRINT 730.942 GOL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Checked out 14/05/2024 068051

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Library Journal Review

Famous for transforming the natural world into the canvas for his surprising and colorful work, Goldsworthy expands upon his fascination with snowballs in the urban melting action documented here. Imagine walking through your city on a hot summer day and discovering a large snowball melting on the sidewalk. This is just what Londoners experienced when on the night of June 21, 2000, Goldsworthy, working the Barbican Arts Centre in London with many helpers, placed 13 huge snowballs throughout the city. For the next six days he watched and recorded as each ball (weighing about a ton) was sculpted by the city environment, people's touch, and temperature. Though three of the snowballs were destroyed by an angry viewer, most succumbed to the wind and the warm summer air, slowly revealing the objects packed within them: barbed wire, feathers, stones, branches, wool, and more. The resulting shifts in shape, color, and texture comment gently, and with humor, on the transience of time, the beauty of change, and the steady force of nature. The many color photographs included here document the melting balls as well as Londoners' reactions. Goldsworthy's daily comments, from the first snowfall to the last drip, and the Tate Gallery's Judith Collins's perfectly friendly and accessible introduction make this playful but complex work a pleasure to explore. Recommended for all contemporary and environmental art collections. Rebecca Miller, "Library Journal" (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

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