Peter Donnelly is an artist who can truly claim to see the bigger picture while attending to the devil that’s in the detail. He is also an artist who is far from precious about his work, since few mediums can be as transitory as the one he chooses to work in. While humankind has surely been creating artworks out of sand since long before we have been able to preserve any trace of their fleeting existence, few sand artists can have worked on such a scale as Peter Donnelly. And few revelled so much in the march of the incoming tide.
Based in Christchurch, New Zealand, Peter Donnelly has been practicing his unique take on sand art for over ten years, a period during which he has created almost one thousand pieces of art – only to see each creative outpouring washed away by the encroaching sea.
Elaborate patterns integrate seamlessly with more recognisable forms as Donnelly’s works come to life beneath his dancing feet and the deft movements of rake and stick. Crowds of people look on – bemused, wondering, excited – and Donnelly continues with his dance.
Four hours later, a piece of art that looks as though it might have taken days is born, before the tide rolls in and what was created is destroyed. Yet for the sand artist, this is an essential part of the process: an ephemeral moment in which a gift is given, to the ocean, to the universe.
Donnelly doesn’t do what he does for the audience – although he more than welcomes their participation – and he certainly doesn’t do it for the money; no, Donnelly does it as a sacred celebration through which he can feel complete
In terms of skills, he has a knack for perspective, and an uncanny vision for the whole while he is immersed in the finer details. He also has a strong confidence in his own – literally – step-by-step process.
It’s a small wonder that this sand artist’s performance-like work – in which he feels rather than sees what he is doing – is regularly watched by myriad rapt gazes, of tourists and locals alike
actually i think some ppl have passion of something they just do it without thinking about results n other things like some ppl do these stuff for fame or money but some ppl do it bc they love it once done they dont care about other stuff.
just my thought
San Francisco-area landscape artist Andreas Amador etches massive sand drawings onto beaches during full moons when his canvas reaches its largest potential. Using only a rake and often several helpers the geometric and organic shapes are slowly carved into the sand, often interacting with the physical topography like the stones in a zen garden. The works exist for only a few moments, just long enough to snap a few photographs before being completely engulfed by the encroaching tide. Amador has also collaborated on a number of killer marriage proposals, the question popped as part of his elaborate drawings viewable from an elevated distance.