Skip to Content
Room & Book
Bookshop
Art & Objects
Exhibitions & Collections
All Exhibitions
The Peter Townsend Archive
Ovidiu Maitec: 34 Photographs
From the Library of Franc Dixon Architect
The Scrapbooks of Jean Kingsnorth
Room & Book at Blue Mountain School
Dear Alastair: a collection of correspondence
The Art Library of Alastair Grieve Part III: Victoriana
The Art Library of Dr Alastair Grieve Part II
The Art Library of Dr Alastair Grieve Part I
Room & Book in residence at the Poorhouse Reading Rooms
From the Library of Sir Sidney Nolan
Room & Book at Domo Baal
From the Library of Dr Simon Pierse
Ways of Feeling
Sidney Nolan Trust Fundraiser
About
Contact/Subscribe
Login Account
0
0
Room & Book
Bookshop
Art & Objects
Exhibitions & Collections
All Exhibitions
The Peter Townsend Archive
Ovidiu Maitec: 34 Photographs
From the Library of Franc Dixon Architect
The Scrapbooks of Jean Kingsnorth
Room & Book at Blue Mountain School
Dear Alastair: a collection of correspondence
The Art Library of Alastair Grieve Part III: Victoriana
The Art Library of Dr Alastair Grieve Part II
The Art Library of Dr Alastair Grieve Part I
Room & Book in residence at the Poorhouse Reading Rooms
From the Library of Sir Sidney Nolan
Room & Book at Domo Baal
From the Library of Dr Simon Pierse
Ways of Feeling
Sidney Nolan Trust Fundraiser
About
Contact/Subscribe
Login Account
0
0
Bookshop
Art & Objects
Folder: Exhibitions & Collections
Back
All Exhibitions
The Peter Townsend Archive
Ovidiu Maitec: 34 Photographs
From the Library of Franc Dixon Architect
The Scrapbooks of Jean Kingsnorth
Room & Book at Blue Mountain School
Dear Alastair: a collection of correspondence
The Art Library of Alastair Grieve Part III: Victoriana
The Art Library of Dr Alastair Grieve Part II
The Art Library of Dr Alastair Grieve Part I
Room & Book in residence at the Poorhouse Reading Rooms
From the Library of Sir Sidney Nolan
Room & Book at Domo Baal
From the Library of Dr Simon Pierse
Ways of Feeling
Sidney Nolan Trust Fundraiser
About
Contact/Subscribe
Login Account
Art Books & Exhibition Catalogues Richard Long, A day's walk past the standing stones of Penwith Peninsula, Cornwall, 1978
RB02022_Richard_Long_Standing_Stones.jpeg Image 1 of
RB02022_Richard_Long_Standing_Stones.jpeg
RB02022_Richard_Long_Standing_Stones.jpeg

Richard Long, A day's walk past the standing stones of Penwith Peninsula, Cornwall, 1978

£0.00
Sold

Artist: Richard Long
Title: A day's walk past the standing stones of Penwith Peninsula, Cornwall, 1978
Publisher and date: Coracle Press for Anthony d’Offay
Publication date: 1980
Format: 10-panel leporello in printed wove card wrappers with nine tipped-in images on coated stock of standing stones
Condition: Fine
Collections: Yale Centre for British Art; Victoria & Albert Museum, London; among others

Richard Long’s artist’s book, A Walk Past Standing Stones, documents a walk taken by the artist in 1978 past the standing stones of the Penwith Peninsula in Cornwall. The book includes nine monochrome images from photographs taken by Long of nine standing stones: The Pipers 1 & 2 (named from a legend about two pipers who were turned to stone for playing music on the Sabbath) Kerris, Tresvennack, Drift, the Blind Fiddler (also apparently named from a legend of a fiddler turned to stone for playing on the Sabbath), Boscawen-Un (a circle of 19 stones near St Buryan), Boswens (near St Just in West Penwith) and Beersheba (near St Ives, also known as The Longstone). Published in an edition of 1000 in 1980 by Coracle Press for Anthony d’Offay Gallery. 

In 1967 whilst still a student at St Martin’s School of Art, Richard Long challenged the notion of what sculpture could be with his pioneering work, A Line Made by Walking. Long's art explores themes of time, space, and distance through the medium of walking. He has expanded his walks to remote regions globally, including an Alps walk documented for the groundbreaking exhibition, When Attitude Becomes Form, at Kunsthalle Bern in 1969. Post-1969, his art extended to creating sculptures in diverse landscapes worldwide. Long started creating distinct mud works in the 1980s, using handprints on walls, and large sculptures from various materials like slate, driftwood, footprints, or stone. His work reflects his experiences in different environments such as mountains, deserts, shorelines, grasslands, rivers, and snowscapes. He records his temporary artworks through photos, maps, and text works, using time, distance, place names, and phenomena as tools for original ideas and impactful narratives.

Find one for me
Add To Cart

Artist: Richard Long
Title: A day's walk past the standing stones of Penwith Peninsula, Cornwall, 1978
Publisher and date: Coracle Press for Anthony d’Offay
Publication date: 1980
Format: 10-panel leporello in printed wove card wrappers with nine tipped-in images on coated stock of standing stones
Condition: Fine
Collections: Yale Centre for British Art; Victoria & Albert Museum, London; among others

Richard Long’s artist’s book, A Walk Past Standing Stones, documents a walk taken by the artist in 1978 past the standing stones of the Penwith Peninsula in Cornwall. The book includes nine monochrome images from photographs taken by Long of nine standing stones: The Pipers 1 & 2 (named from a legend about two pipers who were turned to stone for playing music on the Sabbath) Kerris, Tresvennack, Drift, the Blind Fiddler (also apparently named from a legend of a fiddler turned to stone for playing on the Sabbath), Boscawen-Un (a circle of 19 stones near St Buryan), Boswens (near St Just in West Penwith) and Beersheba (near St Ives, also known as The Longstone). Published in an edition of 1000 in 1980 by Coracle Press for Anthony d’Offay Gallery. 

In 1967 whilst still a student at St Martin’s School of Art, Richard Long challenged the notion of what sculpture could be with his pioneering work, A Line Made by Walking. Long's art explores themes of time, space, and distance through the medium of walking. He has expanded his walks to remote regions globally, including an Alps walk documented for the groundbreaking exhibition, When Attitude Becomes Form, at Kunsthalle Bern in 1969. Post-1969, his art extended to creating sculptures in diverse landscapes worldwide. Long started creating distinct mud works in the 1980s, using handprints on walls, and large sculptures from various materials like slate, driftwood, footprints, or stone. His work reflects his experiences in different environments such as mountains, deserts, shorelines, grasslands, rivers, and snowscapes. He records his temporary artworks through photos, maps, and text works, using time, distance, place names, and phenomena as tools for original ideas and impactful narratives.

Artist: Richard Long
Title: A day's walk past the standing stones of Penwith Peninsula, Cornwall, 1978
Publisher and date: Coracle Press for Anthony d’Offay
Publication date: 1980
Format: 10-panel leporello in printed wove card wrappers with nine tipped-in images on coated stock of standing stones
Condition: Fine
Collections: Yale Centre for British Art; Victoria & Albert Museum, London; among others

Richard Long’s artist’s book, A Walk Past Standing Stones, documents a walk taken by the artist in 1978 past the standing stones of the Penwith Peninsula in Cornwall. The book includes nine monochrome images from photographs taken by Long of nine standing stones: The Pipers 1 & 2 (named from a legend about two pipers who were turned to stone for playing music on the Sabbath) Kerris, Tresvennack, Drift, the Blind Fiddler (also apparently named from a legend of a fiddler turned to stone for playing on the Sabbath), Boscawen-Un (a circle of 19 stones near St Buryan), Boswens (near St Just in West Penwith) and Beersheba (near St Ives, also known as The Longstone). Published in an edition of 1000 in 1980 by Coracle Press for Anthony d’Offay Gallery. 

In 1967 whilst still a student at St Martin’s School of Art, Richard Long challenged the notion of what sculpture could be with his pioneering work, A Line Made by Walking. Long's art explores themes of time, space, and distance through the medium of walking. He has expanded his walks to remote regions globally, including an Alps walk documented for the groundbreaking exhibition, When Attitude Becomes Form, at Kunsthalle Bern in 1969. Post-1969, his art extended to creating sculptures in diverse landscapes worldwide. Long started creating distinct mud works in the 1980s, using handprints on walls, and large sculptures from various materials like slate, driftwood, footprints, or stone. His work reflects his experiences in different environments such as mountains, deserts, shorelines, grasslands, rivers, and snowscapes. He records his temporary artworks through photos, maps, and text works, using time, distance, place names, and phenomena as tools for original ideas and impactful narratives.


© Room&Book 2025 | +44 (0)7742 159953 | info@roomandbook.co.uk