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Striding Arches, Scotland Building, Project, Photo, News, Design, Property, Image
Striding Arches Scotland : Architecture Information
Work by Andy Goldsworthy in Scottish Borders, Scotland, UK, Europe
Andy Goldsworthy's Striding Arches, Dumfriesshire
Bringing people, art and the landscape together
29 Jun 2009
Photographs : Mike Bolam, courtesy of Dumfries & Galloway Arts
Association
Andy Goldsworthy's red sandstone arches, stride the wild and unspoilt
landscape of the Scottish Southern Uplands, creating a unique sense
of place and interpreting a little known area of the country. They
offer a dialogue between structure and place and history and the landscape.

Now open for its first season, this hugely innovative, permanent artist-led
project, created near Goldsworthy's home, demonstrates his deep understanding
of and engagement with the landscape and is unique to the UK .
Three arches stride the hilltops around the natural amphitheatre that
is Cairnhead. In the heart of the glen, another arch springs from
The Byre, a disused farm building, creating a place that is both sculpture
and shelter.
Arch Striding through Byre

Formed from hand-dressed blocks of red sandstone from a nearby quarry,
each arch stands just under four metres high, with a span of about
seven metres high, weighing approximately 27 tons and consisting of
31 blocks. Like the other single arches that Goldsworthy has made
in Canada and the USA, this is totally self-supporting.
Like the sandstone and the people on their journeys over the centuries,
the arches parallel the viewer's journey. The physical journey for
the walker from arch to arch and hilltop to hilltop; the mental journey
required when undertaking one of the more arduous walks and the very
way in which the arches themselves can seem to journey through and
with the landscape.
Striding Arch on Benbrack Hill

Andy Goldsworthy explained: "This work is about the social nature
of landscape. Landscape is a very vigorous, powerful, challenging
subject to deal with and people are very much part of it."
The highest arch sits on top of Colt Hill at 598m, offering spectacular
views of the surrounding countryside and a sightline of the other
arches. The sites were carefully chosen, reflecting Goldsworthy's
intimate knowledge of the landscape, so that from each of the hilltop
arches, the other two arches would be visible, thus acting as markers
in the landscape and interacting with the viewer and each other.
Arches are traditionally seen as doorways and in Goldsworthy's other
works this is definitely not the case, but here at Cairnhead, they
do offer an entrance way of a kind; an opening into a landscape which
.people can now explore throughout the year.
Installation of Byre Arch

Two other artists with a sensitivity to landscape and place were commissioned
to make work in response to the natural and human history of the place.
They have produced subtle works which interpret the landscape and
the people who have helped shape it.
Artist and poet Alec Finlay has traced a truly beautiful walk which
follows a course punctuated by eight letterboxes in which a stamp
and inkpad can be found. Eight successive impressions taken from these
in the course of the walk - which can be done by following Dalwhat
Water either upstream or downstream - make up a Renga or circular
poem and at the same time offer the participant a way into interacting
with and observing the landscape.
Striding Arch on Colt Hill

Stonecarver Pip Hall was fascinated by the human history of the place.
Impressed by the sense of a long line of changing lives taking their
course in a relatively unchanging landscape, she set about devising
inscriptions to celebrate the people who had lived in the valley.
In the Byre's lush meadow are carvings in slabs of Caithness stone
which make up an informal bench. Into this stone, she has carved the
names of some of the inhabitants of Cairnhead over the centuries,
accompanied by motifs depicting objects that were part of everyday
farming life. Incorporated into the stone dyke by the Byre, are sandstone
slabs (the stone chosen to echo the arches) on which Pip Hall has
cut a selection from the dozen or so names by which Cairnhead has
been known over the last 500 years.
Carved names in dyke at Byre entrance

Striding Arches has opened up a 1347 hectare site of wild and majestic
landscape, close to the town of Moniaive, provided the community with
a focus and a voice and enabled the recording of oral history that
in another generation would have been lost. It is the first installation
of its kind for Scotland and unique to the British Isles. Walks to
the arches are signposted on information panels or for download from
the website.
Striding Arches brochure with maps

Andy Goldsworthy
Andy Goldsworthy (b. 1956) is one of our best known British artists.
There are regular exhibitions and permanent installations of his work
in Britain, France, the United States and Canada. Although he travels
all over the world to carry out commissions, the landscape around
his home in Dumfriesshire remains at the heart of his work. The self-supporting
stone arch is a form that Goldsworthy first built in the early 1980s.
It has developed and recurred in his work ever since.
In March 2008, Andy Goldsworthy was interviewed at his home by Dr
Tina Fiske. DVD available on request or can be incorporated into your
website.
Access
The site is on Forestry Commission land and is open all year, 24 hours
a day. There is no charge for entry. Visitors are free to follow a
designated route or with map and compass choose their own route to
the arches.
Partners
Striding Arches is a partnership between Andy Goldsworthy, Cairnhead
Community Forest Trust, Forestry Commission Scotland and Dumfries
and Galloway Arts Association Public Art Team. Solway Heritage were
the design consultants with advice from Scottish Natural Heritage.
The project is funded by Scottish Arts Council, Scottish Natural Heritage,
Landfill Tax Credit, Leader Plus, Community Regeneration Fund, Robertson
Trust, Dumfries and Galloway Council and The Yorkshire Sculpture Park.
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Comments / photos for the Striding Arches Scotland Architecture page
welcome:
info@e-architect.co.uk
Striding Arches Building : page - adrian welch
/ isabelle lomholt
Website : www.moniaive.org.uk |
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