News of the World: Stone me!
Meet the man who’s made balancing giant rocks an artform.
A dazzlingly clear morning and I am standing on a rock-strewn, deserted beach in Dorset. Behind me, in this beautiful bay, a lush cliff face sprouts 1,000 different shades of green. Bliss you might think. And it is. Except that my fingers are sore, my arms are aching and (I am sorry to say this) I almost wish I were back in the office in London. The reason? For two hours I've been desperately trying to balance giant rocks on top of each other. And failing badly. Perhaps I should explain. I am here to meet Adrian Gray - one of Britain's oddest artists. And this amazing beach, accessible only by boat or a treacherous climb, is Gray's canvas.
Gray has an unusual artistic technique. Remember that famous Monty Python sketch about The Society For Putting Things On Top Of Other Things? The joke was about how human beings can unwittingly immerse themselves in utterly futile activities. Well, the art Gray creates is a result of nothing more sophisticated than putting things on top of other things. Big rocks on top of other big rocks, to be precise. Then he photographs the results and sells the images. How futile can you get? But the weird thing is that it's not futile at all. The end results are, quite simply, breathtaking.
Look at the images here. Surely these rocks - virtually floating on air - cannot possibly stay standing? Just what is holding them in place? Has the Government secretly repealed the laws of physics? Yet there is no cheating involved in any of the photographs. No steel rods, no magnets, no computer trickery. The only glue he uses is Nature's. Gravity. By very carefully 'feeling' the balancing point of each rock he handles - a process that requires awesome skill and patience - Gray is able to arrange them in ways that seem incredible.
Imagine trying to balance a chest of drawers on just one of its legs, on top of a boulder, and you get an idea of what Gray gets up to. "There is a real sense of wonder," says Gray, "when I balance two rocks in such a way that it gives the impression that it's impossible for them to stay in place. I don't want to sound pretentious, but it makes the sculpture seem almost alive."
Do people think he cheats? All the time. But his art is balancing rocks. Simple. Odd. And, in its own way, hauntingly beautiful.
Daily Mail
Nehézségi szint:
- MEGJELENT A MAGAZIN MÁJUSI SZÁMA!
- NOTW - Bangkok-up
- NOTW - British sperm donor may have fathered 600 children
- NOTW - Nudy ferry riot
- NOTW - Trenton Oldfield faces public order charge
- Short story of the Titanic
- Fact or fiction? The tragic love couple of the Titanic
- Celeb bits - Robbie Williams and Ayda Field expecting first child
- Celeb bits - Miley Cyrus: I am not anorexic
- Celeb bits - Alec Baldwin’s stalker
Hozzászólások
kidolgozott tételek és szókincs listák
2005.11.23 - A 'THE' HATÁROZOTT NÉVELŐ HASZNÁLATA TULAJDONNEVEKKEL
Sziasztok! Europro középfokú szakmai nyelvvizsgához is jó ez a könyv?
City & Guilds - Felkészítő könyv középfokú írásbeli vizsgára
Garden tools - Kerti szerszámok
Szia! Csak példányszámbeli különbség van a két csomag között. Minden hanganyag elérhető minden eddig megjelent számhoz. Üdv, Nóri …
MÁSFÉL ÉVAD - 18 szám - 2010/2012
Szia! Érdeklődnék, hogy a 1.5 és 2.0 verzió között a 6 szám különbségen kívü van-e valami eltérés? Uaugy …
MÁSFÉL ÉVAD - 18 szám - 2010/2012
Listening to music
Abba - Thank you for the music - Karaoke
Trees in English
Trees in English
Angol ECL B2 középfok tételek (javított)
Angol ECL B2 középfok tételek (javított)
Trees in English
100 legfontosabb szó: CLOTHING-RUHÁZKODÁS (kártyák+hanganyag)
Flowers in English
Flowers in English
5Perc Angol - Kezdőknek és Újrakezdőknek CD1., CD2.
Flowers in English
Flowers in English
Flowers in English
Flowers in English
Flowers in English
Flowers in English
Basic Body/Tesrészek







