TERESA MOLLER
“Sometimes I found myself like a nurse…healing the wounds inflicted by man…” The works of Teresa Moller demonstrate both a belief in nature’s rehabilitative power, and ambivalence towards altering the natural world with manmade structures. Accordingly, her landscape interventions seek to both create a stage for nature, and to disappear entirely into it.
At Punta Pite, 150km north of Santiago, a series of paths, steps and platforms traces a line along the cliffs. Crafted from stone by a team of 50 masons, the route connecting the seaside towns of Zapallar and Papudo appears at times to be a monumental work of sculpture, while at other times it almost vanishes altogether into the dramatic contours of the cliff face. The most well-known and representative of Moller’s projects, Punta Pite (2005) demonstrates the subtlety, imagination and poetry for which the Chilean landscape architect is renowned.
A protégé of pioneering Modernist landscape architect Juan Grimm, Moller is today regarded as one of the world’s foremost designers of landscapes, gardens and urban spaces. “Sometimes it is absolute[ly] clear where to walk and to go... and sometimes you have to search for clues…like in life…”
www.teresamoller.cl
Text borrowed from Natural Artifice Conference website
At Punta Pite, 150km north of Santiago, a series of paths, steps and platforms traces a line along the cliffs. Crafted from stone by a team of 50 masons, the route connecting the seaside towns of Zapallar and Papudo appears at times to be a monumental work of sculpture, while at other times it almost vanishes altogether into the dramatic contours of the cliff face. The most well-known and representative of Moller’s projects, Punta Pite (2005) demonstrates the subtlety, imagination and poetry for which the Chilean landscape architect is renowned.
A protégé of pioneering Modernist landscape architect Juan Grimm, Moller is today regarded as one of the world’s foremost designers of landscapes, gardens and urban spaces. “Sometimes it is absolute[ly] clear where to walk and to go... and sometimes you have to search for clues…like in life…”
www.teresamoller.cl
Text borrowed from Natural Artifice Conference website