A number of anode spots was observed on a cryogenic copper electrode during steady-state arc discharge. The anode was refrigerated by liquid nitrogen in order to keep its surface at an extremely low temperature. The arc was established in air at atmospheric pressure and the arc current was adjusted in the range 2 to 20 A DC. Multiple anode spots appeared more frequently as the arc current increased, and their maximum number was seventeen in a 20 A arc. Photographs taken with a high speed camera showed that the occurrence of multiple anode spots was not an instantaneous transient phenomenon but a quasi-stationary one.