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London Review of Books Christmas Books

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David Craig

  • Time by Andy Goldsworthy

Sculpture need not be a bronze statue of a town councillor or a marble figure of a goddess, respectfully plinthed in gallery or plaza; or a curvaceous wooden form strung like a harp which we gaze at in dumbfounded silence. These days, it may well be a drystone wall winding between trees before burying its end in a lake, like the great Norse serpent for ever drinking the world’s waters dry. Or a cairn on a Highland headland with a fire flaming inside it. Or a longboat made of stakes and stones and turf, grounded in the undergrowth of a forest.

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David Craig’s novel The Unbroken Harp is just out from Whittles.

LRB cover artwork

From the archive

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Yellow Sky, Red Sea, Violet Sands
Richard Wollheim: Nicolas De Staël

At the National Gallery
Peter Campbell: Ingres-flesh

At Tate Britain
Barry Schwabsky on Bridget Riley

In Hackney
Iain Sinclair on Steve Dilworth