Artwork "PETRIFIED WOOD CIRCLE" by Richard Long in Freiberg Cathedral

Freiberg Cathedral is home to Hans Witten's tulip pulpit, one of the most beautiful works by the late Gothic sculptor. Richard Long (* 1945) revolutionised sculpture as a land art artist with his archaic-looking stone circles. The work PETRIFIED WOOD CIRCLE, created in 2000, consists of millions of years old fossilised wood from the red sequoia and light-coloured cedar wood. Installed under the Gothic, white-green coloured arches of the cloister, the work invites you to feast your eyes and meditate.

Event information

Date & Time

until

A circle of petrified, densely packed pieces of wood, half cedar and half American redwood, without a plinth or border, measuring three metres, lying directly on the ground. Petrified Wood Circle is one of the iconic ground sculptures by Turner Prize winner and pioneer of British Land Art Richard Long, who was born in Bristol, Great Britain in 1945. The artist collected the material for his work, created in 2000, while travelling in remote places around the world and arranged it into a circle to visualise the layer "that lies on top of thousands of other layers of human and geographical history on the surface of the land." (R. Long, 1969) Long explains his traces of walking through the landscape, stones and wood that he aligns in a circle, a ring of handprints that he paints on a wall, or thinking about the changing direction of the wind to sculpture. His works embody life itself, they are personal and still, closely linked to universal, timeless forms of action, as well as to the earth that produces his sculptures and into which they will eventually return.

More Dates

more information

Organizer

Program field

PURPLE PATH art and sculpture trail

Together with Chemnitz, 38 municipalities and communities form the Capital of Culture region, which will be the European Capital of Culture in 2025. The PURPLE PATH, a large art and sculpture trail and the main project of the European Capital of Culture, will be created in the region by 2025 and beyond.

European Capital of Culture The Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and Media Free State of Saxony European Capital of Culture

This project is cofinanced by tax funds on the basis of the parliamentary budget of the state of Saxony and by federal funds from the Beauftragte der Bundesregierung für Kultur und Medien (Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and Media), as well as funds from the City of Chemnitz.