Mia maxima culpa. For a few years I felt it wasn’t cool to love Andy Goldsworthy. The British artist’s interventions in and workings with nature, whereas extremely skilful and sometimes very stunning, appeared out of kilter with an more and more hardcore, conceptually underpinned and urban-orientated artwork world. It additionally didn’t assist that almost all of his work might solely be skilled at one take away. Books and pictures had been the one file of the ephemeral items he’d created from ice, leaves, sticks and stones; in addition to of the extra lasting installations—partitions, sheepfolds, cairn paths and large arches—he’d make in situ, normally in distant areas internationally.
However lately two Goldsworthy encounters—one at Andy Goldsworthy: Fifty Years’, his main survey on the Nationwide Galleries of Scotland in Edinburgh, and the opposite at Jupiter Artland, the place he has 4 everlasting works on present—have radically modified my view. Not solely do each these manifestations reveal his work to be more durable, darker, extra emotionally charged and broadly referential than I had hitherto realised, but additionally throughout the context of the ever-escalating local weather and ecological disaster, Goldsworthy’s profound however gentle contact engagement with the pure world now appears totally applicable to our instances.
A spotlight for pressure and wonder
There’s actually nothing whimsical about Wool Runner (2025), the huge smelly strip of unkempt sheep’s wool that runs up the center of the grand staircase of the Nationwide Gallery of Scotland’s Royal Scottish Academy (RSA), ushering guests into the present. This uncommon carpet runner is comprised of untreated fleeces which have been marked with the brilliantly colored spray-painted blotches utilized by farmers to color code their flocks, gathered after which joined collectively by Goldsworthy. Subsequent, on the prime of the steps, there’s a dense barrier of rusty recycled barbed wire, twisted between and round two central classical columns, which needs to be circumnavigated to realize entry to the upstairs galleries.
Andy Goldsworthy, Fence, 2025
Picture by Stuart Armitt, 2025
It’s a removed from welcoming starting that speaks ambiguously of how we use the land, with Goldsworthy describing the barbed wire Fence (2025)—a uncommon sortie into artifical steel—as “a spotlight for the stress and the wonder that I really feel is in each the constructing and the panorama”. However let’s not neglect that from his mid teenagers and all through a lot of his pupil years this artist labored as a farmhand, so his relationship with the land has been unsentimental from the get go. Or that his expertise of the arduous and repetitive digging, constructing, stacking, gathering and sorting that got here with the job has fed immediately into his artwork.
As of late he nonetheless not often makes use of assistants and is happier working with farmers, landowners, foresters and the builders of drystone partitions than with curators and gallerists. However he’s additionally no rural harmless and has labored in cities internationally, together with making rain shadows on the pavements of New York. He has additionally put in large snowballs all through town of London and, extra lastingly, created the sculptural Roof from slate for Washington’s Nationwide Gallery of Artwork in 2004-5 and Backyard of Stones in New York’s Museum of Jewish Heritage in 2003.
A forest in a home
Based on Goldsworthy, the present RSA exhibition is one single art work, made in response to the 200-year-old constructing, its areas, supplies, gentle, and character. Among the many dramatic new commissions for within the upstairs galleries is Oak Passage (2025), which is simply that, a straight path which cuts by means of a excessive tangle of wind-fallen oak timber and boughs, a lot of which had been felled by Storm Éowyn in the beginning of this 12 months. These unruly branches kind a potent reminder that the oak floorboards upon which they sit had been as soon as residing timber, with Goldsworthy contemplating the ground to be an integral a part of the piece. “I wish to see the forest in a home and the home in a forest,” he says.

Andy Goldsworthy, Skylight, 2025
Picture by Stuart Armitt, 2025
The construction of the RSA constructing additionally dictates the type of Skylight (2025), a shimmering sculptural curtain of greater than 10,000 grey-brown dried bullrushes. These cling down from the perimeters of the central skylight in lengthy rows of vertical traces, their bulbous seed heads eliminated and consistently altering color underneath the pure gentle. Against this, an adjoining room is emphatically earthbound and unimaginable to enter, with a ground fully lined in rocks of all sizes. The work, titled Gravestones, is a mass of rubble made up of stones displaced by a number of burials, and gathered by Goldsworthy from greater than 100 graveyards throughout the south west of Scotland. The rock-filled room thus turns into a charged memento mori, considered by Goldsworthy as “a deeply shifting and humbling reaffirmation of life, which has given me a unique perspective on the land and our connection to it”.
All through this present the interrelationship of people and land is reasserted in myriad methods. Crimson Wall (2025) covers greater than 35 sq. m of gallery wall in a thick layer of cracked, dried clay comprised of the wealthy crimson earth close to Goldsworthy’s Dumfriesshire residence. Like our human blood, it owes its vivid color to a excessive iron content material, which for Goldsworthy underlines the actual fact “that we’re sure to the earth”.
An anti-flag challenge
A special type of earthly allegiance is addressed in Flags (2020), initially made for the Rockefeller Centre in New York. Right here the flags of every of the 50 American states have been changed by a clean banner, dyed with what Goldsworthy describes as “the reddest earth I might get from that state”. The result’s a room-high procession of hanging textiles in earthy, ruddy shades starting from a pale tawny yellow to a deep vivid orange. “I hoped these flags would transcend borders and that they might mark a unique type of defence of the land… slightly than present the logo of every state and what separates them, it’s concerning the earth and what connects them,” says Goldsworthy, who describes the piece as “an anti-flag challenge in some ways”.

Andy Goldsworthy, Flags, 2020
Picture by Stuart Armitt, 2025
Many times we’re reminded that the agricultural panorama isn’t any romantic idyll, and that it could possibly provide astonishing magnificence but additionally ache, peril and discomfort. Within the title of artwork Goldsworthy will get coated in mud, soaked in surf, and movies himself in mid winter crawling with excruciating slowness by means of the thorny centre of a hawthorn hedge. One wall panel declares that he feels “a deep insecurity in nature. A pure, violent and unpredictable vitality”.
Whether or not within the latest giant scale commissions or within the movies and pictures of works courting again to the mid 1970’s which might be introduced within the RSA’s decrease galleries, there’s a pervasive sense of drama, hazard and bodily exertion. Even essentially the most beautiful juxtapositions of torn leaves or delicately balanced shards of ice had been typically made in excessive climate circumstances, whereas work have been created out of the blood of a hare by accident hit by a automobile, or by the muddy hooves of sheep clustered round a mineral block. On one particularly stunning 1982 {photograph} of a dramatic zig-zag of break up feathers taken from a lifeless heron, Goldsworth has written: “Heron smelling, needed to maintain breath when plucking.”
Hidden or unacknowledged
When the RSA present ends in November, all its elements will both vanish again into the land or be recycled—Gravestones, as an example, is destined to be half of a bigger everlasting piece to be put in on the Scottish property of the Duke of Buccleuch. However simply exterior Edinburgh at Jupiter Artland, Goldsworthy maintains a strong and lasting presence with 4 permanently-installed commissions all courting from 2009. Every of those have interaction with their environment in putting and surprising methods. In Stone Home (Bonnington) a easy stone bothy has been constructed over a bit of excavated bedrock, which erupts uncannily into the darkish house of the home in a turbulent and decidedly undomestic method. This dramatic intervention was achieved by merely eradicating the topsoil to show after which body the bedrock that had lain beneath for millenia. “Hidden or not understood or acknowledged,” as Goldsworthy places it.

Andy Goldsworthy, Stone Home (Bonnington), (2009)
Picture: Allan Pollok-Morris, courtesy of Jupiter Artland
The coppicing of timber, which includes periodically chopping right down to a stump to encourage the expansion of recent shoots, is a central a part of property administration. It additionally performs a key function in Goldsworthy’s three different Jupiter Artland works. Close to the café is Clay Tree Wall, a whole felled tree has been laterally connected to the wall by a thick membrane of native clay blended with hair taken from mates, household and workers of Jupiter Artland. Over time the clay’s floor has dried and cracked to kind a lattice of fissures, paying homage to veins and different webs of change and communication linking each the human and the pure world.
Then deeper into the woods Goldsworthy has created what he describes as a Stone Coppice, whereby thirty giant, domestically sourced boulders have been wedged into the branches of residing timber. Because of the coppicing course of, these timber kind a basket-like cradle near the bottom. It’s a piece in perpetual change because the enveloping branches develop across the rocks at their centre, whereas additionally lifting the rocks increased above the bottom.

Andy Goldsworthy, Stone Coppice (2009)
Picture: Allan Pollok-Morris, courtesy of Jupiter Artland
The preciousness of the pure world
In Coppice Room, the fourth and arguably most dramatic of Jupiter Artland’s works, a derelict windowless outhouse has been crammed with a mass of tree trunks vertically extending from ground to ceiling. Just a few ft contained in the timber turn into too densely crowded to allow any additional penetration and it’s disconcertingly unimaginable to gauge how far again they lengthen into the gloom. Crossing this modest threshold is like being unexpectedly transported into the darkish coronary heart of a forest, with Goldsworthy merely saying that right here, as all the time, he desires his works “to talk for themselves”.
That is what I now see his work does, in methods which might be typically wealthy in potential however implicit in which means and metaphor. Goldsworthy views all the pieces he makes, giant and small, everlasting or ephemeral, as a way of “studying to make sense of the world”. And, by means of his typically gruelling investigations, he helps us to understand the ability and the preciousness of what surrounds us, too.








