The framing option for this RUN includes two 1 inch black wood frames (one frame per print) with UV-glass, foam core backing and ready to hang hardware.
Scott Hocking's Seventeen Shitty Mountains editions are presented in partnership with David Klein Gallery.
Read our full interview with Scott Hocking and check out the Seventeen Shitty Mountains video at
News.1xRUN.com...
"Seventeen Shitty Mountains consists of 17 individual sculptures, constructed from discarded concrete materials found onsite. 8 of the sculptures are large towers, built from concrete sewer pipes that weigh approximately 10,000 lbs each (5 tons), sized approx. 8 ft long x 6 ft diameter each 3 of these large towers are approximately 22 ft high, built from 3 of the 10,000 lb concrete pipes, and therefore weigh approximately 30,000 lbs each (15 tons) the 5 other large towers are built of 2 or 3 large concrete pipes and are approx. 14 ft tall, and range from 15,000 lbs (7.5 tons) to 30,000 lbs (15 tons)
the 9 other sculptures are part of what I call Shitty Stonehenge, aka Hermaphrohenge, aka Scotthenge, and make up an arc of columns / towers clustered together onsite.
All of the materials used in the installation are arranged and stacked cast-concrete sewer pipes of various sizes and diameters, as well as other cast-concrete slabs, chunks, and fragments.
The title Seventeen Shitty Mountains is a play on the site-specific sculptural installation Seven Magic Mountains by Ugo Rondinone, built out of large, stacked boulders in the Nevada desert, and painted various vibrant Day-Glo colors. This work is very photogenic and “selfie” friendly. In my work, using discarded and decaying concrete sewer pipes – literally “shit pipes” – I decided to make a megalithic installation that at once parodies the Seven Magic Mountains work, and also riffs on the ancient megaliths and henges of the UK, ancient Roman or Greek ruins, and other prehistoric sites such as the Moa of Easter Island. A contemporary mysterious artifact and/or ceremonial site of unknown origin that people can stumble upon and discover – perhaps while buying their fruits and vegetables at the market. Playing with ideas of ceremony, ritual, and contrasting ancient mythologies and mysticism with our everyday life are central themes to my artworks.
Physically, I build large-scale site-specific installations like this almost as if they’re a large 3D sketch. Placement of the works and their overall arrangement was determined as I worked. The short 1-week timespan helps me make quick decisions and trust that I will figure it all out as I go. An important tenant in my work is a belief in chance, and that things go as they are supposed to go. Often, I work in sites that are not mine, I’m trespassing and I do not own the materials I use, and this circumstance has led me to consistently practice letting go of any control of the fate and transitions of the physical works. Instead, I focus on the practice itself, from the conceptual aspects behind the ideas, to meditative qualities of work onsite, often alone, with only the sounds of nature surrounding me. In the end, like most site-specific installations I create, the work will be destroyed, altered, or eliminated in some way. But the photographic series’ created from the three dimensional works lives on, often the only evidence that the site-specific artworks ever existed." - Scott Hocking