Martin Hill

Martin Hill’s international award winning photographs of ephemeral environmental sculptures made in collaboration with Philippa Jones, utilise the transformative power of nature’s design principles to awaken the human spirit towards a transition to a cyclical restorative human economy.
 

Temporal Landscape

 
 

Medium:  C-print
Dimensions:  80×100cm
Edition:  6

 
 

 

Artist's Bio

Martin Hill (b. 1946, London, UK) 

Educated at High Wycombe University of art and design. Worked as a designer in London, Nairobi, Sydney, and Auckland New Zealand founding a design company and winning several national and international awards. 

Philippa Jones (b. 1950, New Zealand)

Studied English, art history. Worked as a weaver and journalist.

In 1992 Hill beganmaking environmental sculpture works. Hill and Jones met in 1994 and began to collaborate in making ephemeral sculptures which Hill photographed, published and exhibited internationally.

A book of photographs of the sculptures titled Earth to Earth was published in 2007 and included writing from leaders in sustainable practice. A film of their art practice was made in 2010, titled A Delicate Canvas.

Recent projects are Watershed, an exhibition examining the water cycle and climate change exhibited at McClelland Gallery Melbourne and New Zealand in 2014, an exhibition at Pingyao International Photography Festival in 2014 which won an award for Excellence in Photography. In December 2014 they were awarded an artist residency by Antarctica New Zealand at Scott Base where they completed sculptures at locations in McMurdo Sound and the Ross Ice Shelf. In January 2015 they participated in an artists project in Fiordland, New Zealand. Several works from Antarctica and Fiordland are included in this exhibition. 

A major global work in progress is the Fine Line Project begun 1995: 12 ephemeral sculp-tures made on high points connected by a line encircling Earth. The tenth sculpture was completed in Antarctica December 2014. The Fine Line Project will be completed when the last sculpture is made on Mt Ngauruhoe in New Zealand, the site of the first sculpture.