Wales-based artist Jon Foreman precisely arranges a various of common materials found in nature, from stones to leaves to shells, to create ephemeral land art that will be washed away by tide or rain. The artist’s projects feature entrancing and mesmeric whorls arranged in gradients, each of thme is perfectly precise in compositions and concentric circles.
Related posts on VUING:
Artist recreated Van Gogh's 1889 painting “Olive Trees" by planting 1.2-Acre field
Massive art installation existing in Sahara Desert 17 years
Land art of bird portraits that finally will fly away with the breeze
Hand-carved stone sculptures look like doughs
Stone sculptures by José Manuel Castro López that look like fabric creases
Unzipped rocks by Japanese artist Hirotoshi Ito
Beautiful land art – Not created by aliens
Wondrous stone spheres stacked by Pennsylvania-based stone artist
Lifelike stone paintings created by Japanese artist Akie
Creepy rocks painted eyes
Gravity-defying site-specific art installations by artist Cornelia Konrads
Autumn color spreading on the ground proves the beauty of the fallen leaves
Transform stones and rocks into work of art
Artworks created out of stones found on the beach
Surreal and bizarre river stone sculptures by Japanese artist Hirotoshi Ito
Art installations created from plastic and trash that wash up from 50 countries around the world mir...