Sixteen years after the release of the groundbreaking film, Rivers and Tides: Andy Goldsworthy Working with Time, director Thomas Riedelsheimer returns with Leaning into the Wind.
This riveting follow-up continues his exploration of the Scottish environmental artist’s creative process. From urban Edinburgh and Glasgow to the South of France and New England, each organic location provides a fresh kaleidoscopic canvas for the art. A lushly visualized travelogue with another eloquent score by Fred Frith, Goldsworthy’s work, revealed in exquisite cinematography, redefines landscape and connects humanity with the natural world.
Sixteen years after the release of the groundbreaking film, Rivers and Tides: Andy Goldsworthy Working with Time, director Thomas Riedelsheimer returns with Leaning into the Wind.
This riveting follow-up continues his exploration of the Scottish environmental artist’s creative process. From urban Edinburgh and Glasgow to the South of France and New England, each organic location provides a fresh kaleidoscopic canvas for the art. A lushly visualized travelogue with another eloquent score by Fred Frith, Goldsworthy’s work, revealed in exquisite cinematography, redefines landscape and connects humanity with the natural world.
Sixteen years after the release of the groundbreaking film, Rivers and Tides: Andy Goldsworthy Working with Time, director Thomas Riedelsheimer returns with Leaning into the Wind.
This riveting follow-up continues his exploration of the Scottish environmental artist’s creative process. From urban Edinburgh and Glasgow to the South of France and New England, each organic location provides a fresh kaleidoscopic canvas for the art. A lushly visualized travelogue with another eloquent score by Fred Frith, Goldsworthy’s work, revealed in exquisite cinematography, redefines landscape and connects humanity with the natural world.