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Beaches. Discarded Christmas trees, temporarily stored here in the parking lot of the picnic area at Ft. Macon, North Carolina, are used to establish new sand dunes. The trees catch blowing sand allowing for the formation of new dunes, Ft. Macon was built by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers between 1826 and 1834

Updated: 136d ago

Beaches. Discarded Christmas trees, temporarily stored here in the parking lot of the picnic area at Ft. Macon, North Carolina, are used to establish new sand dunes. The trees catch blowing sand allowing for the formation of new dunes, Ft. Macon was built by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers between 1826 and 1834 is an artwork. It is housed at the Museum of Modern Art (New York) and was created in 1993. Classified as a Photograph, it measures 50.80 cm in width and 40.60 cm in height.

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"A pile of discarded Christmas trees"

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Download datasets about Beaches. Discarded Christmas trees, temporarily stored here in the parking lot of the picnic area at Ft. Macon, North Carolina, are used to establish new sand dunes. The trees catch blowing sand allowing for the formation of new dunes, Ft. Macon was built by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers between 1826 and 1834:

dataset Dataset of artists who created Beaches. Discarded Christmas trees, temporarily stored here in the parking lot of the picnic area at Ft. Macon, North Carolina, are used to establish new sand dunes. The trees catch blowing sand allowing for the formation of new dunes, Ft. Macon was built by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers between 1826 and 1834

"Beaches. Discarded Christmas trees, temporarily stored here in the parking lot of the picnic area at Ft. Macon, North Carolina, are used to establish new sand dunes. The trees catch blowing sand allowing for the formation of new dunes, Ft. Macon was built by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers between 1826 and 1834" is one of the artworks in Photograph, artworks in Museum of Modern Art (New York) and 783,823 artworks in our database.

This dashboard is based on data from: Interpol, MoMA, Rijks, Tate.

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