Sand art and play

(Redirected from Playing with sand)

Sand art is the practice of modelling sand into an artistic form, such as sand brushing, sand sculpting, sand painting, or creating sand bottles. A sandcastle is a type of sand sculpture resembling a miniature building, often a castle. The drip castle variation uses wet sand that is dribbled down to form organic shapes before the sands dries.

Making a sandcastle
Sand art during COVID pandemic
Sandcastle of Dover Castle
Sand sculpture of Noah's Ark

Most sand play takes place on sandy beaches, where the two basic building ingredients, sand and water, are available in abundance. Some sand play occurs in dry sandpits and sandboxes, though mostly by children and rarely for art forms. Tidal beaches generally have sand that limits height and structure because of the shape of the sand grains. Good sculpture sand is somewhat dirty, having silt and clay that helps lock the irregular-shaped sand grains together.

A sand pagoda constructed at Wat Phu Khao Thong in Ko Samui during Songkran

Sand castles are typically made by children for fun, but there are also sand-sculpture contests for adults that involve large, complex constructions. The largest sandcastle made in a contest was 18 feet tall; the owner, Ronald Malcnujio, a five-foot-tall man, had to use several ladders, each the height of the sandcastle. His sculpture consisted of one ton of sand and 10 litres of water to sculpt. [citation needed]

Sand castles and sculptures

edit
 
Sand art of Ratha Yatra by Sudarsan Pattnaik
 
A simple sandcastle formed from a shaped bucket
 
A drip castle

Sand grains will always stick together unless the sand is reasonably fine. While dry sand is loose, wet sand is adherent if the proper amounts of sand and water are mixed. The reason for this is that water forms little "bridges" between the grains of sand when it is damp due to the forces of surface tension.[1]

When the sand dries out or gets wet, the shape of a structure may change, and "landslides" are common. A mix of fine (mostly sharper) and coarse sand granules is very important to achieve good "sand construction" results. Fine granules that have been rounded by the natural influences of seas, rivers or fluvials, in turn negatively influence the bonding between the individual granules as they more easily slide past each other.

Shovels and buckets are the main construction tools used in creating sand castles and sand sculptures, although some people use only their hands. A simple sand castle can be made by filling a bucket with damp sand, placing it upside-down on the beach, and removing the bucket. For larger constructions, water from the sea to mix with the sand can be brought to the building site with a bucket or other container. Sometimes forms of other materials, such as wood or plastic are constructed to hold piles of sand in place and in specific shapes.[2]

Tunnels large enough to enter are extremely hazardous; children and adults die every year when such underground chambers collapsed under weight and instability of sand, or due to the tide coming up or the structure being hit by a wave. Sometimes, a dam can be built to hold back the water, tidal forts, which are incredibly large sandcastles with thick walls to protect the keep from the sea, can be built, or canals can be dug to contain the water.

A variant to a formed sculpture is the drip castle, made by dribbling very wet sand.[3]

Sand sculpting as an art form has become popular in coastal beach areas. Hundreds of annual competitions are held all over the world. Techniques can be quite sophisticated, and record-breaking achievements have been noted in the Guinness World Records. Sometimes, contests are staged as advertising or promotional events. Most sand sculptors come from other disciplines but a few earn their living solely from sand-related activities.

Notable sand sculpture artists include Sudarsan Pattnaik and M N Gowri who created the Mysore Sand Sculpture Museum.

Festivals and competitions

edit
 
Sand Sculpture Festival 2011 Taiwan

From 1989 until 2009, a World Championship in Sand Sculpture was held in Harrison Hot Springs in Harrison, British Columbia, Canada, also known as "Harrisand". The competition had solo, double and team categories. The world championship was held in Ft. Myers, Florida, and other venues for a limited time. Other countries hold their own versions of the world championships as it is not possible to get all the people who may qualify in the same place at the same time due to the expense and logistics.

The world's tallest sand castle was built on Myrtle Beach in South Carolina by Team Sandtastic as part of the 2007 Sun Fun Festival. The structure was 49.55 feet (15.1 m) high. It took 10 days to construct and used 300 truckloads of sand.[4] This record was broken in 2019 when a 58-feet tall sand castle was unveiled at Rügen in Germany. The tallest-ever sand castle was built by a group of international artists and was constructed with 11,000 tons of sand.[citation needed]

Since 2003, Bettystown beach, Meath in Ireland has been home to the Irish annual National Sandcastle and Sand Sculpturing competition.[5]

In Lappeenranta, Finland, there is an annual tourist sight called the Sandcastle (Hiekkalinna), where a work of art made of sand according to a changing theme is created every year.[6]

The record for the number of individual sandcastles built in one hour, was set at Scarborough, England, on 18 August 2012. Four hundred people constructed 683 castles, with each being two feet wide and high, accompanied by four turrets.

Sand pagodas

edit

In southeast Asia sand pagodas are created in order to build Buddhist merit[7] The tradition has been going on since the 1500s.[8]

Play

edit
 
Burying someone up to their neck

One of the main attractions of a sandy beach, especially for children, is playing with the sand; it presents more possibilities than an ordinary sandbox. One can make a mountain, a pit (encountering clay or the water table), canals, tunnels, bridges, a sculpture (representing a person, animal, etc., like a statue, or a scale model of a building), amongst many other things.

Burying someone up to their neck in sand or burying oneself in such a manner is another popular beach activity.

Sand angels

edit
 
Making a sand angel

Sand angels are made in the same manner as snow angels; a person lies on their back in the sand, extending their arms and legs and swishes them back and forth.

Fight against the tide

edit

A popular game is building a heap of sand, as high as possible, to withstand the upcoming tide.

Sand art

edit

Sand raking and beach murals

edit
 
Rake art on a sandbar

Sand raking is performed on a sandy beach where the artist rakes the dry top layer of sand, exposing the wet underlayer to create light-and-dark contrasts. Usually the designs are quite large and are similar to man-made art crop circles. The designs are ephemeral, and wash away with the next tide.[9] Some notable artists working in this medium include Andres Amador, Sean Corcoran and Marc Treanor.

Other

edit
 
A sand glass just after being turned

A sand glass is a display in which there are multiple colors of sand in water between two sheets of glass. Unlike sand paintings, a sand glass is meant to be turned; the sand, traditionally in black and a light color, moves into new shapes with each turn. The term "sand glass" is a translation of the Portuguese phrase quadro de areia, literally "sand frame" or "sand picture". Unlike sand paintings, which are a traditional craft, these are found around the world in many colors and sizes.

Sandpainting is the art of pouring colored sands and other pigments onto a surface to make a painting.

Sand bottles are created by pouring colored sands into a bottle to make a scene.

Sand drawing is the creation of a drawing by scratching it out in a flat base of sand.

Sand animation is the making of animation by manipulating sand to build figures, textures and movement, frame by frame.

References

edit
  1. ^ Barry, Patrick (6 January 2001). "The Science of Sandcastles". FirstScience.com. Archived from the original on 3 May 2009. Retrieved 2 August 2009.
  2. ^ How to make a sand sculpture
  3. ^ Fun at the Beach: Drip Castles
  4. ^ Volk, Willy (2007-06-11). "Retrieved on 19 June 2007". Gadling.com. Retrieved 2014-03-01.
  5. ^ "National Sandcastle and Sand Sculpturing". Retrieved 4 May 2020.
  6. ^ [Sandcastle – Visit Lappeenranta]
  7. ^ Nisbet, John (1901). Burma Under British Rule--and Before. A. Constable & Company, Limited.
  8. ^ "Tabaung, the month of Sand Pagoda Festival". Global New Light Of Myanmar. 2020-03-07. Archived from the original on May 15, 2020. Retrieved 2020-05-23.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  9. ^ A Man Takes A Single Rake To The Beach. And When You Zoom Out And See It… Mind BLOWN.
edit