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YUCCA MESA, CALIFORNIA

Rhythms of Life

An artist’s vision for connectivity spans seven continents and 16 countries.

Rhythms of Life is a breathtaking Earthworks sculpture installed in 2008 by the world-renowned Australian sculpturist, Andrew Rogers.

The structure can be seen near the intersection of Old Woman Springs Road (SR 247) and Aberdeen just five miles north of Yucca Valley in California.

Rogers, who is a distinguished artist, exhibits his work internationally with his larger Earthworks sculptures found in numerous private and public collections across Southeast Asia, the Middle East, the United States, and Australia.

Rhythms of Life—perhaps the work for which Rogers is best known—is part of a larger project that forms a chain of 51 massive stone sculptures around the world. The sculptures are meant to be seen from two vantage points: from the ground—as a series of stone structures—and from above to show off the structure’s larger form.

To-date, the project currently spans seven continents, 16 countries, and has involved over 7,500 people who assist in the construction of the structures. Rhythms of Life is a collaborative endeavor that relies on the local community to both construct the sculpture as well as ideate the symbols to be included in the Earthwork.

Know Before You Go

Follow SR 247 / Old Woman Springs north five miles until you come to Aberdeen. Turn right on Aberdeen and immediately find a spot to turn around, park, and look west towards the hills to see Earthworks. Or turn left onto the dirt Old Aberdeen Road, park, and look up. You’re welcome to get up close to the sculpture, but leave your vehicle in the dirt lot and walk up.

Click here to see the full article: https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/rhythms-of-life

Andrew Rogers – National Gallery of Australia

National Gallery of Australia
Andrew Rogers:  Maquettes and Sculptures 1996-2016

This display brings together a selection of maquettes and sculptures by Andrew Rogers, an artist deeply inspired by the structures, materials and implicit rhythms of our built and natural environments.

Growing and Flora Exemplar suggest the sinuous forms of leaves and flowers that swell, coil and curve with latent energy. Rhythms of the Metropolis embodies a similar sense of tension in the feverish ribbon fall and loose upward arc of opposing rhythms held in careful suspense. I Am, one of several proofs and versions of this work, is a generative form that bristles then delicately unfurls, revealing a supple surface beneath a rigid exterior.

Informed by the rugged expression of Auguste Rodin, the organic abstraction of Henry Moore, and the cool conceptualism of Anthony Caro – Andrew Rogers’ unique sculptural language suggests growth, regeneration and material transformation.

A new film Rhythms of Life also profiles the conception and construction of the artist’s renowned land sculptures or ‘geoglyphs’ made in collaboration with communities throughout the world.

On exhibition from July 2018

https://nga.gov.au/rogers/

 

2018 Wynne Prize Finalist

The Art Gallery of New South Wales has announced Andrew Rogers’ selection as a finalist in the 2018 Wynne Prize.

The Wynne Prize is awarded to the best landscape painting of Australian scenery or for the best example of figure sculpture by an Australian Artist.

Rogers’ sculpture ‘Embrace’ will be on exhibition at the Art Gallery of New South Wales  until September 2018.

https://www.artgallery.nsw.gov.au/prizes/wynne/2018/29999/

Land of the Giants, Christie’s 2018

Land of the Giants:

Gibbs Farm in New Zealand is dominated by art made on a scale to match the grand ambitions of its owner, Alan Gibbs

Sculpture on an epic scale.

Rogers’ ‘Sentinels’ 2017 is one of 28 site-specific sculptures at Gibbs Farm near Auckland on New Zealand’s North Island.

Christie’s Magazine February – March 2018

Article: Jonathan Bastable
Photographs: David Hartley-Mitchell

 

 

My Park’s Bigger Than Yours

The Art Newspaper Magazine– Sculpture 2017
September 2017, Page 15

MY PARK’S BIGGER THAN YOURS

A cluster of rich male collectors are creating vast sculpture parks in various parts of the world-and proving to be exacting patrons.
By Gareth Harris

On the Mornington Peninsula south of Melbourne, sculptures by Clement Meadmore, Geoffrey Bartlett and Anthony Pryor are springing up across the landscape. Works by the Australian artists are among 45 pieces dotted around a 135-hectare seafront property owned by the retail billionaire John Gandel. A winery and restaurant form part of the complex – but the main attraction is the Point Leo Estate sculpture park, which is due to open later this year.

Gandel is joining an exclusive club: patrons who set up sprawling sculpture parks in a bid to make their mark on the art scene. The New Zealand-born magnate Alan Gibbs has built a gargantuan but relatively undiscovered contemporary art park. Gibbs Farm, in Kaipara Harbour, north of Auckland, commissioning works by artists such as Len Lye and Andy Goldsworthy. The Scottish collector David Roberts is closing his gallery in London this autumn and plans to open a publicly accessible eight-hectare sculpture park in Somerset, western England (pending approval from the local council).

Geoffrey Edwards, a former curator of sculpture and glass at the National Gallery of Victoria in Melbourne, is advising on the hugely ambitious Point Leo project; it is a first for Australia, he says, because the country’s larger sculpture gardens and parks are almost all associated with public institutions.

“Only Guy could get me to carve 420 tons of solid basalt into 13 columns”
ANDREW ROGERS, SCULPTOR

“No one has gone about creating a 1arge-scale sculpture park from scratch, and certainly not on the basis of a carefully thought-through vision and business plan, as at Point Leo, involving a professional curatorial adviser and a noted landscape architect to devise a layout of paths, copses, lawns and discreet enclosures.” Edwards says.

The curator has relished installing works in this “quintessential Australian landscape setting, with rolling grassland receding into the distance, existing conifer windbreaks and broad vistas to Western Port Bay and beyond”. Tony Cragg’s work Luke (2008) stands in a sunken, amphitheatre-like space in the landscape, and pieces by the late Japanese-Australian sculptor Akio Makigawa will also nestle among the contours. Commissions, few in number but major in scale, will take shape over the next two years he says.

The Australian sculptor Andrew Rogers has created two works for Point Leo: a 7.5m-high
stainless steel form, titled Rise 1, and a 3m-high bronze called Folded. His expansive, audacious work has found favour among patrons who look to him for show-stopping land art. “Alan (Gibbs) made the effort to travel to Cappadocia, Turkey, to view my land art park; walking around the 13 structures and the 19m-high basalt columns triggered the realisation of Sentinels (2017),” he says. The four-column piece creates and eye-watering silhouette as the sun rises over the undulating vistas of Gibbs Farm.

Guy Laliberte, the co-founder of Cirque du Soleil, is another Rogers devotee. Laliberte arrives at his retreat on Ibiza’s west coast in his boat. Walking towards his cliffside estate, he passes a monolithic, Stonehenge-like installation that dominates, the dusty, sun-baked landscape. The work, named Time and Space-the Speed of Light, is by Rogers. ·”Only Guy could get me to carve 420 tons of solid basalt into 13 columns,” the sculptor says The columns were loaded on to a ship and transported 4,400km from Turkey to Spain in 2014.

But how demanding are these mega-collectors? “All of these individuals appreciate rigour and are meticulous in wanting an outstanding sculpture completed to the highest standards and finishes,” Rogers says. “It took five years of dialogue before Alan pressed the button. He says he enjoys the company of sculptors as ‘they are resilient individuals’. John Gandel’s (project) was four years in gestation.”

Realising a gallery without walls seems to excite these men who think big. Potential tax breaks for philanthropic sculptural initiatives and boosting local economies may also be part of the equation. Polly Bielecka, the director of the sculpture gallery Pangolin London, says that parks also offer an opportunity for collectors to experiment and commission unique pieces rather than an edition, directly from the artist.

“A sculpture park is, of course, also the perfect status symbol,” she says.

Vogue Italia: A Conversation with Andrew Rogers

Arte, Intervista ad Andrew Rogers

È l’artista dei primati Andew Rogers: il suo “Rhythms of Life” è una costellazione di 51 massicce sculture (dette geoglifi) disseminate nei continenti. Land Art che abbraccia tutto il globo e che si può vedere da un satellite a 770 km sopra di noi. Un progetto che racconta di un gigantismo senza precedenti e che ha coinvolto 7’500 persone in 16 nazioni, dall’esercito cinese ai Masai.

Ho incontrato Rogers durante il suo viaggio europeo – Biennale di Venezia e Art Basel comprese, ovvio – prima che tornasse nella sua Australia.

Come ha scelto le locations per “Rhythms of Life”?
Ognuna è significativa per storia e patrimonio. Molte hanno una topografia di grande interesse: nell’Arava Desert (Israele) il sito si trova a 122 m sotto il livello del mare; il Deserto di Atacama (Cile) è il più arido del pianeta; in Nepal il geoglifo “Knot” (una sorta di labirinto) è stato creato nella gola più profonda al mondo, mentre in Antartide abbiamo utilizzato la morena dei ghiacciai.

In che modo le comunità locali vengono coinvolte?
La maggior parte delle migliaia di persone che hanno partecipato a “Rhythms of Life” non è mai stata coinvolta nel creare arte. Il processo di creazione è essenziale per il progetto. Si lavora fianco a fianco e in intesa con gli altri per qualcosa che inizialmente è solo un concetto astratto, con la consapevolezza che quello che si crea è storia futura. Uomini, donne e gruppi etnici operano insieme. Le sculture sono un regalo alla comunità che ne è orgogliosa e si occupa di mantenerle nel tempo.

Gli Himba della Namibia sono considerati gli ultimi veri nomadi al mondo; adorano i loro antenati con un fuoco sacro che viene sempre tenuto acceso. La scultura “Sacred Fire” è diventata un luogo di celebrazioni.

I suoi geoglifi sono quindi luoghi che accolgono eventi.
Un altro aspetto che contraddistingue “Rhythms of Life” è l’attenzione ai rituali delle comunità coinvolte, alle mitologie e credenze. Spesso i partecipanti – che vivono in luoghi remoti e dal clima estremo – aderiscono a qualche forma di sciamanesimo con rituali che si realizzano prima e dopo la costruzione delle sculture. In Cile abbiamo bevuto un miscuglio di vino e foglie di coca tritate. In Sri Lanka si è tenuta una processione di danze popolari e acrobati con gong e piatti e i sacerdoti hanno bollito il latte per propiziarsi la buona sorte.

Ci parli delle sue sculture “We Are” esposte fino al 26 novembre a Venezia a Palazzo Mora.
Venezia è un centro di civilizzazione e storia antica. Era e continua a essere un luogo d’intersezione. Le sculture riflettono sulla diversità degli individui, ma anche sull’importanza di un dialogo che consideri storia e patrimonio e che le nostre azioni diventeranno storia nel futuro. Come le mie sculture di Land Art, anche “We Are” parla di globalizzazione e umanità condivisa. Entrambi i lavori sono metafora della relazione imprescindibile fra singolo e comunità e spingono i limiti in termine di forma e sfida nella costruzione. Entrambi dovrebbero agire da catalizzatori per la visione di un mondo migliore.

La sua “Unfurling Energy” è presente alla “Expo 2017. Future Energy” ad Astana (Kazakhstan). 
La mia scultura è stata scelta per la sua forma fluida, ispirata in parte all’energia del vento; infatti, considerando le condizioni del clima di Astana, è in grado di resistere al forte vento, alla neve, al ghiaccio e a temperature rigidissime. Una sfida ingegneristica che ha richiesto grande maestria artigianale e attenzione alla qualità del metallo e delle saldature. La produzione è stata attentamente supervisionata da LERA – Leslie E. Robertson Associates, gli stessi ingegneri della ricostruzione del World Trade Centre.
Anche “Unfurling Energy” mette in evidenza il nostro ruolo di custodi, con responsabilità verso chi ci circonda e chi arriverà dopo di noi. Il presente sarà riflesso nel futuro.

Cosa bolle in pentola?
Sto lavorando a progetti per la Turchia e il Perù.
Come dire: un instancabile e visionario globe-trotter dell’arte.
By Amanda Prada

August 7, 2017 12:45 PM
Click here for the full article:
http://www.vogue.it/l-uomo-vogue/news/2017/08/07/arte-intervista-ad-andrew-rogers/

Works take a walk in the park

Sydney Morning Herald Weekend, 5-6 August 2017

Page 15

Artists from around Australia will feature in a free exhibition , Sculpture at Barangaroo, which opens at Barangaroo Reserve today.

 

Andrew Rogers’ bronze sculpture Folded 3 (pictured) is among the 14 works on display, with others including a large vinyl and aluminium kangaroo by Richard Tipping and Indigenous artwork by Adam King of the Boomalli Aboriginal Artists Co-operative.

 

The inner city exhibition, held in partnership with Sculpture by the Sea, will finish on 20 August.  Though the park is open 24 hours a day, organisers have encouraged visitors to see the works between 8am and 6pm.

http://www.barangaroo.com/see-and-do/whats-on/sculpture-at-barangaroo/

About Andrew Rogers: Life and Land

Working on sculptures and land art is a chance to create unique forms. Sculptures become a part of the society in which they exist. Reflecting on the works of other contemporary sculptors Anish Kapoor, Jeff Koons and Antony Gormley, it can be seen how each artist works in a diverse manner and how they are influenced by the human form and the place it occupies.

Antony Gormley is often connected to works involving the human body; ‘Angel of the North’ and ‘Planets’ are well-known examples. ‘Planets’, a piece which comprised carved boulders, drew strong connections between man and the environment as does Rogers’ work which resonates with this sentiment. Rogers works personally on large scale and in the abstract through his land art. This involves the natural landscape and diverse peoples.

Anish Kapoor’s world of abstract sculpture uses colour, shape, mirrors, geometric patterns and scale. Kapoor’s art, like Rogers’, is spread through multiple cities, allowing the public to interact with his art.

Rogers’ sculpture and land art in public spaces creates a presence which cannot be achieved within the physical constraints of a gallery or museum. Viewers encounter work they may have never intended to. ‘I Am’, Rogers’ major sculpture in the glass atrium of the Canberra International Airport, is encountered daily by thousands of people. Gormleys’ ‘Angel of the North’ is heavily viewed daily due to its location. The sculpture resides on a hill overlooking a motorway in Northeast England and is viewed by thousands of commuters each day.

Contemporary sculptor Jeff Koons also draws comparisons between his sculptures and the human form. Known for his playful, childhood nostalgia inspired pieces; like Rogers, Koons’ sculptures have travelled the world. Koons describes liking things that involve air because, “They are a symbol of us. We’re breathing machines, we’re inflatable.” ‘Balloon Dog’ is described as being eternally optimistic and regardless of its bright, multi-coloured, mirrored exterior, it appears to fit into any surrounding it is placed.

The juxtaposition between art, and the land it is presented on, can create another layer to a piece of art altogether. Many of Rogers’ works draw a connection to the land on which they stand, and often express the idea that we are a part of something bigger. From the ‘We Are’ series, which was unveiled in Venice, Italy, at the beginning of May, to Rogers’ ‘Rhythms of Life’ Land Art project; both are influenced by the interconnection of humanity through space and time. Working with a mix of human forms, land, emotions and philosophies allows a connection between the viewer and sculpture or land art that we are all capable of accessing.

Anna Henry
10 June 2017

2017-06-10-About Andrew Rogers-Life and Land

ARTNews: Scenes from the Venice Biennale: Day 3

Andrew Rogers Venice Biennale Day 3

2017 Venice Biennale

By Katherine McMahon  Posted 11 May 2017 11:24am

(Excerpt)

Thursday at the Venice Biennale was stricken with cloudy weather and a little bit of rain, but that didn’t stop the crowds as a slew of pavilions had official openings between the Giardini and Arsenale, including those of the United Statem Chile and Denmark.  Below, have a look around town.

Australian artist Andrew Rogers with one of his sculptures at the opening of his collateral exhibition “WE ARE” at Palazzo Mora.

http://www.artnews.com/2017/05/11/scenes-from-the-venice-biennale-day-3/

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Andrew Rogers ‘We Are’ Venice Biennale

Andrew Rogers’ ‘We Are’ will be unveiled on 11 May in a collateral exhibition to the 2017 Venice Biennale.

‘We Are’, comprises eight large bronze and stainless steel sculptures which are related to sculptures in prominent public and private collections around the world.

Rogers’ contemporary sculptures are located in the garden of the 16th century Palazzo Mora against the stunning backdrop of the surrounding historic buildings.

Photos: 2017 Casey Kelbaugh

 

Andrew Rogers at the Venice Biennale

Venice Biennale 2017, Palazzo Mora: Andrew Rogers will unveil eight large bronze and stainless steel sculptures in a Venice Biennale collateral event.

Rogers’ installation “We Are” is a significant work with great provenance. It is related to sculptures in prominent public and private collections around the world.

In the lead up to the unveiling, The Auburn Girl reports about the exhibition:

“We Are”, the latest sculpture work by Andrew Rogers, will be presented on Thursday, May 11th as a collateral exhibition at the Venice Biennale at the 57th International Art Exhibition.

Composed of eight large bronze and stainless steel sculptures, this installation is a further iteration of the Rogers series entitled “I Am”. Presented in part by the Global Art Affairs Foundation, the work will be visible from May 9 to November 26, 2017 at Palazzo Mora in Venice.

Rogers’ practice explores human emotion through the light and organic shapes that define his sculptural works as well as the importance of the individual in influencing change. The artist sees the works of the “I Am” series and its derivative “We Are” as a metaphor for the dichotomy of human nature.

To view the original article head here:

Andrew Rogers presenta l’esposizione collaterale WE ARE presso la Biennale Di Venezia

Andrew Rogers: ‘We Are’ – Collateral Exhibition to La Biennale di Venezia

We Are”, a sculptural installation by contemporary artist Andrew Rogers, will be unveiled on Thursday 11 May in a collateral exhibition to the 2017 edition of La Biennale di Venezia – 57th International Art Exhibition.

Comprised of eight large bronze and stainless steel sculptures, this installation is a further iteration of Rogers’ series titled “I Am”. Presented in part by the Global Art Affairs Foundation; the work will be on view through until November 26, 2017, at Palazzo Mora in Venice, Italy.

Rogers’ practice explores human emotion through the light, organic forms that define his sculptural works, as well as the importance of the individual in affecting change. The artist sees the works in the series “I Am” and its derivative “We Are” as a metaphor for the dichotomy of human nature. The rough, undulating, organic outer surfaces that represent our physical selves are in direct contrast to the delicate, polished interiors reflecting the internal personal world of our thoughts.

Belief in the individual as a catalyst for change informs Rogers’ ongoing practice: “We are all individuals possessing the sanctity of a singular life and the ability to express ourselves. At the same time we are part of the society within which we live,” Rogers says. “These figurative forms are to remind us that it is the individual that makes our world a place of justice and compassion.”

Rogers work complements the ideas expressed by Christine Macel, 2017 Director of the Venice Biennale, in her curatorial statement, that, “In a world full of conflicts and jolts, in which humanism is being seriously jeopardized, art is the most precious part of the human being. It is the ideal place for reflection, individual expression, freedom, and fundamental questions…more than ever, the role, the voice and the responsibility of the artist are crucial in the framework of contemporary debates.”

The work philosophically relates to Rogers’ ongoing series of geoglyphs – large-scale land-art installations for which he is best known. To date, the project – titled Rhythms of Life – encompasses 51 major stone sculptures across the world, which act together to create the largest contemporary land art project. Each individual geoglyph is an act of collaboration between Rogers and the local community in which it is situated – as they work together to find and create a symbol that is significant to each respective region and people – and yet as a group they form a set of drawings across the earth visible from space. Over the years this project has involved over 7,500 people in 16 countries across all seven continents and continues to grow.

 About the Artist

Andrew Rogers is one of Australia’s most distinguished and internationally recognized contemporary artists. International exhibitions are frequent and his critically acclaimed sculptures are in numerous private and prominent public collections and around the world. Rogers has received many significant commissions, including several large-scale pieces and various forms of land art. Rogers’ work is exhibited widely internationally and is the subject of books and documentaries shown on Ovation in the United States, the Discovery channel in Europe and the ABC and National Geographic channels. The Rhythms of Life land art project is featured on the Google Cultural Institute’s Art Project website in a digital exhibition of ultra-high resolution images.

About the Global Art Affairs Foundation

The GAA Foundation is a Dutch non-profit organization that aims to heighten the awareness about the more philosophical themes in contemporary art, architecture and in culture in general.

Andrew Rogers “We Are” Press Viewing Days: May 7 – 11, 2017

Opening Reception & Unveiling by invitation only: Thursday, May 11, 2017, Palazzo Mora, Venice, 9:00 – 11:00am May 11 – November 26, 2017

 

Come to the Edge 1

Come to the Edge 1
2015
Stainless Steel
125 H x 104 W x 84 D cm
(49” x 41” x 33”)

Stainless steel transformed into a seemingly fluid, dynamic and flexible form.  The immaculate, reflective surfaces within their flawless curves change according to the surrounding environment.