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If you've ever picked up a pebble at the beach and arranged it into a little circle just to pass the time, congrats - you've dabbled in land art. But Welsh artist Jon Foreman? He's playing in a whole other league.
Foreman doesn't just use nature as inspiration, he uses it as his entire toolkit. Pebbles, sticks, leaves, sand, even seaweed become part of his breathtaking installations. His massive spirals, geometric waves, and organic mandalas somehow feel both perfectly planned and completely improvised, like Mother Nature got bored one afternoon and decided to get artsy.
Each piece is temporary, destined to be blown away by wind, swallowed by the tide, or slowly unraveled by gravity. And maybe that's what makes them so special - the knowledge that this exact arrangement will never exist again. It's the kind of art that makes you stop scrolling, take a breath, and maybe even go outside.
Jon Foreman calls his project Sculpt the World, and it's a fitting name. Because when you look at his work, you don't just see rocks on sand. You see intention. You see beauty. And you see what happens when creativity and nature shake hands.