In his 20s, von Schwarzenfeld began a sailing voyage around the world. His trimaran capsized in the Atlantic, off the Florida coast. He survived sixteen days in chest-deep ice-cold water, eating raw fish (not a gourmet experience, he discovered), drinking salt water in desperation, and close to dying from hypothermia. In a near-death experience, he looked at the sky and endless horizon stretching around him to infinity and thought to himself: "There is no end point to life. All of mankind is one entity, like the millions of cells in a human body."
This thought became the germ of an idea that von Schwarzenfeld has spent the greater part of his life realizing -- a project he calls "Global Stone."
Sailing around the world in "Pegasus," his three-masted sailboat, von Schwarzenfeld searched on each of five continents for a pair of magnificent stones, similar in substance, form, and weight (approximately 30 tons). Once he had made his choice, he left one of the "sister stones" in the country of origin, bringing the other (at considerable cost and with mind-boggling logistic planning) to Berlin's Tiergarten. The last of the five stones to be brought to Berlin will arrive tomorrow -- from Bhutan.
The stones in the Tiergarten have been so arranged that their polished surfaces reflect the sunlight in five invisible straight lines. The "sister stones" on the five continents have also been carefully arranged by the artist so that once a year, on June 21st, the sunlight glances off their surface, travels in a frequency of 16 minutes around the world, and meets the pentagram of light between the stones in Berlin exactly at high noon.
The stones -- each a natural wonder, polished, sculptured and inscribed by the artist with one of five linked themes: Awakening, Hope, Forgiveness, Love, and Peace -- are a kind of hieroglyph of the connection between Berlin and the world, as well as the interconnectedness of all nations on these five continents.
I can't think of a better note on which to end my last blog before Christmas 2009.
You can find the Global Stone Project near the Löwengruppe (The Lions) in the Tiergarten. Keeping the Brandenburger Tor behind you, follow the Ahornsteig for 300 m. Or, from Potsdamer Platz, enter the Park from behind the Sony Center, and walk about 250 m.
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