KLINT
A series about abstract coastal formations
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FEBRUARY 2026
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'Hvide Klint' is a chalk cliff along the southern coast of the island of Møn in southeast Denmark, facing the Baltic Sea. Around a kilometer long and rising about 20 meters above the waterline, it is formed from ancient chalk layers that were pushed, stacked, and folded by advancing glaciers during the last ice age.
The cliff face is anything but uniform. The exposed rock is twisted and layered, veined with flint, and stained by mineral seepage. Diagonal fractures cut through the chalk where ancient ice sheets compressed and folded the rock, while pockets of glacial material remain embedded within it, creating a mix of textures and earthy tones.
Shaped by ice, wind, and water over thousands of years, these structures take on abstract, sculptural qualities that are endlessly varied and surprisingly intimate up close.
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