Serpent d'océan (lit. "Serpent of the Ocean" in French) is a work by artist Huang Yong Ping. Depicting a long sea serpent skeleton, it is installed in the intertidal zone at Saint-Brevin-les-Pins, Loire-Atlantique, France and was inaugurated on June 20, 2012.

Serpent d'océan
English: Ocean Serpent
Map
ArtistHuang Yong Ping
Year2012
MediumAluminum
Dimensions130 m (430 ft)
LocationSaint-Brevin-les-Pins, Loire-Atlantique, France
Coordinates47°16′04″N 2°10′15″W / 47.26778°N 2.17083°W / 47.26778; -2.17083

Description

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Serpent d'océan is a monumental sculpture made of aluminum, 130 m long in total. It represents the skeleton of an immense imaginary sea serpent, whose vertebrae undulate to end in an open mouth.

The work is installed at the tip of the Nez-de-Chien, in Mindin, in the territory of the commune of Saint-Brevin-les-Pins in the French département of Loire-Atlantique, at the limit where the Loire estuary joins the Atlantic Ocean. It spreads out over the foreshore area: the serpent's tail is located at the low tide limit, its head at the high tide limit. The sculpture is therefore covered and uncovered at each tide: at low tide it is possible to walk around it, but only the head and the top of the vertebrae stick out at high tide. It is intended to be gradually invaded by vegetation and marine fauna.[1]

The shape of the snake joins that of the Saint-Nazaire bridge, visible nearby; that of the vertebrae echoes the nearby carrelets (lift nets).

History

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The work was produced as part of the 2012 edition of the Estuaire festival and co-financed by the European Union through the European Regional Development Fund.[1] It was inaugurated on June 20, 2012.[2]

Artist

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Huang Yong Ping was a contemporary artist and was a prominent member of the 1980s Chinese avant-garde movement. Born in 1954 in Xiamen, China, he lived in France from 1989, where he died in 2019. He favored the connection of heterogeneous meanings and often addressed the notions of mixing identity and culture.[3] The sculpture is a play on the symbolism of a snake in Western versus Eastern culture.[4]

In 2016, Yong Ping made an even larger serpent measuring 240 metres (790 ft) as part of the Monumenta series at the Grand Palais in Paris.[5]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "• ESTUAIRE 2007/2009/2012 • Huang Yong Ping •". archive.wikiwix.com. Retrieved 2022-04-14.
  2. ^ "Serpent d'océan | ESTUAIRE". Retrieved 2022-04-14.
  3. ^ "Centre Pompidou, Traces du sacré : entretien avec Huang Yong Ping". archive.wikiwix.com. Retrieved 2022-04-14.
  4. ^ "Obituary: Huang Yong Ping died on October 20th". The Economist. ISSN 0013-0613. Retrieved 2024-06-02.
  5. ^ "Giant Serpent Emerges From the Sea Off the Coast of France". My Modern Met. 2018-06-25. Retrieved 2022-04-14.