#Hamish Fulton
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hamish fulton in earthworks and beyond: contemporary art in the landscape - john beardsley (1989)
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Hamish Fulton, Fundación Cerezales Antonino y Cinia. Jean-Marc Manson, 2016
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Hamish Fulton 1946
I wanted to look at a Photographer who took shots of nature and gave great visual impact to the photograph. This first image caught my eye due to the leading lines of their trial leading up to the figure in the background adding a mysterious atmosphere to the image as well as leading into the horizon line and feeling a sense of peace when viewing the image. The image looks to have fog enhancing the mysterious aspect.
This image caught my attention due to the setting as the setting resembled Clyde walkway and it brings a tranquil feeling, however looking at the branches and roots coming from the ground brings an unsettling atmosphere due to it disrupting the path.
Right away from looking at this image it give off an uneasy atmosphere due to the repetition of the trees and leading you down what looks to be a never ending path. Once again it looks like it is foggy and making it look like you are walking into the unknown. Also having it black and white gives the image an anxious feeling.
I wanted to include one of Fulton's artworks and this one stood out to me due to the simplistic of the artwork and the impact it has with the main focal point of the mountains leading your eyes throughout the artwork.
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Books On Books Collection - Anne Moeglin-Delcroix
Ambulo Ergo Sum: Nature As Experience in Artists’ Books (2015) Ambulo Ergo Sum: Nature As Experience in Artists’ Books (2015) Anne Moeglin-Delcroix and Richard Sadleir, trans. Case bound, printed paper over board, with green endbands and matching doublures. H225 x W155 mm. 96 pages. Acquired from Book Depository, 21 August 2019. Photo: Books On Books Collection. For her extended essay, Anne…
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#Anne Moeglin-Delcroix#Claire Bolton#Hamish Fulton#Helen Douglas#herman de vries#Margaret (Molly) Coy#Richard Long
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Artist research: Hamish Fulton
Hamish Fulton: Hamish Fulton | National Galleries of Scotland
Fulton calls himself a walking artist. His photographs aren't specially related to Italy or Venice, but I like the idea of just walking to take nice photos or record it with words.
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Hamish Fulton. A Seven Day Wandering Walk Seven Nights Camping, Myrdalssandur, 1996
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Structural Elements
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Alicja Kwade - Blues Days Dust
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Jiyong Lee - Segmentation
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Itchi - Smoker square, collage
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Camilla Moberg - Inclusive
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Franz Schmidt - Somewhere
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Gay marriage clothespin caketopper
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Hamish Fulton - A Five Day Walk in the Big Bend Region of the Rio Grande, Texas, 1976
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Lee Ufan
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Flavio Carvalho - Concrete Rocks Pack Geometry
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Saloua Raouda - Poem of Nine Verses
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Alicja Kwade - Untitled
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Micronesian Art Navigation chart
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Patent model of a clothes dryer, 1860
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New Tendency - Hash coatrack
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Jeremy Frey - Untitled, 2023
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Willie Cole - Gas Snakes, 1992
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Win McCarthy
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hamish fulton in earthworks and beyond: contemporary art in the landscape - john beardsley (1989)
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Hamish Fulton, "walking artist"
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Walking Intently- My Experience-
Walking Intently is a way to experience and observe the world mindfully while documenting the experience using photography, a sketchbook and a notebook.
My experience of walking intently was not very enjoyable for me. Before going on this walk I researched three artist, Sophie Calle, Richard Long and Hamish Fulton. I was especially drawn to Sophie Calle’s work, Calle is a French writer, photographer, installation artist, and conceptual artist. ��The Detective” is a piece of work where a detective documented a log of Calle’s day, “She hired them to follow me, to report my daily activities and to provide photographic evidence of my existence.” https://teaching.ellenmueller.com/walking/2022/01/30/sophie-calle-the-shadow-1981/ when I read this I instantly had an idea to document existence, people and their lives and their existence in their environment.
For my idea I wanted to watch how people around me behaved and spoke and their body language and how they conform to their environment and what their environment is. However while on this walk I felt very uncomfortable with watching these people and documenting them as I felt like they were watching me and I didn’t feel well prepared with enough resources to sketch and looking back at the sketches I am not happy with the amount or the detail of my sketches. While on my walk it was raining quite heavily and some water would drip onto my pages which annoyed me in the moment but looking at it now I wish I had let it rain a bit more on my book as it would have documented the weather and the environment I was in. Only after my walk did I think of the things I could have documented, writing about the music, maybe even recording it or recording the rain and notes about the smell or my environment. Although I am unhappy with my documentation of my walk I think my experience tells the story much better as to how I adapted and conform to my environment and how this may happen to everyone.
In Calle’s work “The Detective” she was unaware of her being watched and therefore we could see her true self and that is what i wanted to document peoples truth and existence. I feel as though I have a great idea and I can understand and in-vision what I want my work to look like but I wasn’t able to execute this idea right away and I felt angry at myself for this however I would like to try again and i shall gain more confidence with document my walk.
- Sara SC
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Artists Who Use Walking And Footprints
Dennis Oppenheim, Ground Mutations, footprints - 1969
Dennis Oppenheim leaves and then documents his footprints while walking on the snow in Kearny, New Jersey, and New York City with a pair of modified shoes.
Richard Long, A Line Made by Walking - 1967
This piece was made on one of Long’s journeys to St Martin’s from his home in Bristol. He walked backward and forwards in a field until he the flattened turf to a visible line.
Hamish Fulton, Melting 1996
Hamish Fulton is known for his practice of making art through walking experiences. His works often involve documentation, photographs, and text pieces that record his walks in various landscapes around the world.
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Artist: Hamish Fulton born 1946
Medium: Photograph, black and white, on paper and transfer lettering
Dimensions Image: 1372 × 1099 mm
I like Fulton's large-scale meditative odes to nature's majesty, that results from his walking, as is his practice. He carefully attaches words to contextualise his image, though it doesn't explain everything. He chooses his words wisely to maybe pose more questions than they answer with their potential double and ambiguous meaning, and leaves the viewer to contemplate their significance.
Visually, the black and white textural image serves as a document, a real representation of his vision and thoughts in a time and place where he was the only person on the beach having those thoughts and vision.
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Books On Books Collection - Margaret (Molly) Coy & Claire Bolton
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#Anne Moeglin-Delcroix#Claire Bolton#Hamish Fulton#herman de vries#Margaret (Molly) Coy#Richard Long
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