nowhereisland
Alex Hartley South West

In 2004, whilst participating in a Cape Farewell Arctic expedition, artist Alex Hartley discovered Nyskjæret, an island in the Norwegian High Arctic archipelago of Svalbard. The island had been revealed from within the melting ice of a retreating glacier and Alex was the first human to stand on it. 
 
The island, about the size of a football pitch, consists of rubble and moraine around a small amount of bedrock. It is constantly melting, and the surface eroded and dispersed into the sea. As part of London 2012’s Cultural Olympiad, Alex will tour a scaled version of Nyskjæret along the ports and harbours of the South West coast, moving one landscape through another.
 
This epic journey will begin in June 2012. At the end of its journey, the island material will be returned to Svalbard and made whole again.
 

Project Blog

Island History

22 September 2009

In 2004 I went to the Arctic with the climate-change charity Cape Farewell. Artists and scientists were brought together to look at new ways to help people engage with the issues surrounding climate-change. Svalbard is the last land before the North Pole, and it was whilst we were sailing around this most northerly archipelago that I developed my idea of trying to find a new island.

Photoshop Barge and Island

12 September 2009

Photoshop Barge and IslandStamps

 Postcard and Royal Mail stamps

About the artist

Alex Hartley

Alex works primarily with photography, often incorporating it into sculpture and installation. Over 20 years, his work has explored attitudes toward built and natural environments. He has exhibited nationally and internationally at venues including Fruitmarket Gallery, Edinburgh (2007), Natural History Museum (2006), Distrito Cuatro, Madrid (2003), The National Museum of Art, Osaka, Japan (2001) and the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Denmark (2000) and is represented by Victoria Miro Gallery. Alex lives in Dorset