Cumbrians are demanding the return of a crucial piece of England’s
highest mountain, which an artist has admitted taking.
Tourism bosses said they want Ecuadorian artist Oscar Santillan to give
back the small stone taken from Scafell Pike.
The rock features in an exhibition at the London gallery Copperfields,
and is described by the exhibition organizers as the uppermost inch of
the highest mountain in England.
It forms part of Santillan’s The Intruder, which has the stone embedded
in a pedestal.
A description of the exhibition says: “The exhibition ultimately draws
out the obscure. Unexpected events occur: the dance of a dead
philosopher is unveiled, a piece of land is taken, nature and culture
collide.
Departing from the tradition of land art in making often major
modifications to the natural landscape, The Intruder presents an inch of
stone carefully removed from the English countryside.
“At a glance it is seemingly insignificant and yet the material is
carefully presented. Scaling the 3,028ft Scafell Pike in the Lake
District, the artist has taken the uppermost inch of the highest
mountain in England.
An entire nation’s height is modified and its landscape redefined by
means of a single precise action. The artist explores the way in which
human categories are imposed on nature: the largest, the tallest, the
most powerful.”
Ian Stephens, managing director of Cumbria Tourism, said: “We are all
aware that Cumbria’s landscape has long inspired generations of artists.
These include international greats like JMW Turner, Ruskin, Schwitters
and Li Yyan-chia, considered to be one of the founding fathers of
Chinese abstract painting.
These individuals have all taken a piece of this landscape away in the
figurative sense.
This is taking the mickey and we want the top of our mountain back.
At the very least we would like to see the piece returned to the county it has been removed from.”
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