Richard Long: Drinking the rivers of Dartmoor

Richard Long,Lisson Gallery

For his latest exhibition at the gallery, Richard Long presents a series of text works and photographs spanning his entire practice, from the 1970s to the present day. These works chart Long’s innovative path through and alongside histories of conceptual art, centering the artist’s life-long concern with walking as an aesthetic and philosophical practice. As textual and visual documentations of walks embarked worldwide, through mountains and deserts, shorelines and grasslands, rivers and snowscapes, Long’s works give poetic form to the ineffability and ephemerality of human perceptual experience.

Text has consistently featured in the artist’s practice, with the earliest of the five works shown here produced in 1987 (titled Desert Flowers) and the most recent dated 2022 (A Path of Innocence). These works emphasise Long’s preoccupation with the physical engagement of the body in a variety of landscapes. He not only evokes the temperature and geological materiality of a given terrain, such as the fourteen rivers that flow out of Dartmoor or the lavender scents, howling coyotes and roaring winds of Joshua Tree but additionally denotes a temporal specificity to each walk.

The varied formal structures of the text works further evidence Long’s experimental sensibility. Each of the five works here differs in their layout, with some works taking on the form of a circle and others including coloured lines of text in red, yellow, and green. Such variations, which pay equal attention to the words’ meanings and their formal attributes, reference conceptualist histories of concrete poetry. Further, in sculpting these words into precise arrangements to produce particular rhythms, imaginaries, and effects, some of which exude a spiritual character, the text works abstractly draw on the compositional logics of Japanese haiku. At times emphasizing the meditative power of repetition, akin to a mantra, and other times conveying the profundity of simple observed moments in the outdoors, the texts function as resolutely reflexive indexes of being-in-the-world.

Also featured in the galleries are a series of photographs taken by Long on his walks all around the world, from Spain and Norway to China and the Andes.

Duration 16 November 2022 - 21 January 2023
Times Tuesday – Saturday: 11:00am – 6:00pm
Cost Free
Venue Lisson Gallery (27 Bell St)
Address 27 Bell Street, London, NW1 5BY
Contact 4402077242739 / contact@lissongallery.com / www.lissongallery.com

Tags

,