Hand of the Desert
Sculpture of a giant hand in the middle of Atacama desertThe scorched moonscape of Atacama stretches for hundreds of miles on both sides of the Pan-American highway, undisturbed by any sign of human activity. About 75km south of the town of Antofagasta, its monotony is shattered by a sight even more alien then the desert itself, and yet undoubtedly human: an 11-meter-tall hand protruding out of the sand.
Mano de Desierto is a work of the Chilean sculptor Mario Irarrázabal, built in the early 1980s. It was financed by a local booster organization called Corporación Pro Antofagasta.
The motion of hands rising from the ground is an obsession of Mr. Irarrázabal's. His other famous works include another over-sized sculpture exploring the same idea: Monument to the Drowned is located on Parada 4 at Brava Beach in Punta del Este, a popular resort town in Uruguay. Another large sculpture, The Awakening, by American artist John Seward Johnson II expresses a similar idea and is located at National Harbor in Prince George’s County, Maryland.
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Category: Strange Statues
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Edited by: stanestane, Facebook_1262946252, AllisonEng, Rachel