The hand of Atacama Desert
Times of IndiaAmusing Planet/SIGHTSEEING, ATACAMA/ Updated : Jul 7, 2014, 10:31 IST
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Synopsis
In the middle of the Atacama Desert, a giant hand rises from the ground like the remains of an ancient civilisation. In reality, it’s a pretty modern sculpture—an art piece called ‘Mano del Desierto’—created by Chilean artist Mari … Read more
In the middle of the Atacama Desert, a giant hand rises from the ground like the remains of an ancient civilisation. In reality, it’s a pretty modern sculpture—an art piece called ‘Mano del Desierto’—created by Chilean artist Mario Irarrázabal in honour of the victims of injustice and torture during the military regime in Chile. Read less

In the middle of the Atacama Desert, a giant hand rises from the ground like the remains of an ancient civilisation. In reality, it’s a pretty modern sculpture—an art piece called ‘Mano del Desierto’—created by Chilean artist Mario Irarrázabal in honour of the victims of injustice and torture during the military regime in Chile.

Mario Irarrázabal studied philosophy and art at the University of Notre Dame in United States and later studied sculpture with the German sculptor Otto Waldemar in West Berlin. He has several similar gigantic hand sculptures on display at various locations around the world. One of them is at Brava Beach in Punta del Este, Uruguay and is known by various names such as Hombre emergiendo a la vida (Man Emerging into Life), Monumento los Dedos (Monument of the Fingers), or Monumento al Ahogado (Monument to the Drowned). Another hand comes out from the ground at Juan Carlos I Park in Madrid, Spain and was installed in 1987.
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