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Antony Gormley: Some of the Facts
16 June-2 September 2001
Opening hours: Daily 1000-1830
This summer Tate St Ives is showing a challenging
group of sculptural works by Antony Gormley. The entire gallery
space will be devoted to four major installations: Bed (1981);
Field for the British Isles (1993); Still (1994) and
Critical Mass (1995). Gormley is one of Britain's most important
contemporary sculptors and this exhibition of his work at Tate St
Ives will be the largest display of works by one artist ever to
be shown at the gallery.
The sculptures are dramatic installations that explore
the connection between physical and metaphysical self and the body
in relation to history and place. Field was made by a group
of volunteers who were invited by Gormley to create a multitude
of small figures out of thirty tons of clay, which were fired and
placed to fill the gallery space.

Staff at St Ives setting
up Field for the British Isles, 1993
Courtesy of the Arts Council Collection, Hayward Gallery ©
Antony Gormley 2001
Each figure is unique, deriving its scale and shape
from the hand of the person who made it. At Tate St Ives forty thousand
figures face towards the viewer and this myriad of watching eyes
is a haunting and emotional experience.

Field for the British Isles,
1993
Courtesy of the Arts Council Collection, Hayward Gallery ©
Antony Gormley 2001
Field is a national touring exhibition organised
by the Hayward Gallery for the Arts Council of England.
Critical Mass is a group of sixty solid iron
figures taken from the artist's own body and forming a lexicon of
twelve basic positions from foetal to upright, which will be placed
in the circular sea-facing gallery at Tate St Ives. 'Critical mass'
is a term in physics for the necessary density in uranium for nuclear
fission to take place. This installation acts against a background
of modernism, in which the body lost its place in art and was alienated
through industrialisation and war.
Still is a single lead body case of the artist's
daughter at the age of six days, and will be shown in isolation.
Bed is made out of 12000 slices of bread arranged in layers
out of which the artist has eaten his own volume in two halves and
refers to the idea of stratification as in 'bedrock'.

Bed,
1980-1, Tate © Antony Gormley 2001
In Artists on Artists, an initiative which
allows artists to choose works from the Tate Collection that they
find inspirational, Gormley has chosen a selection of works by Barbara
Hepworth, Ben Nicholson and Naum Gabo, which will be complemented
by a text he has written.
Antony Gormley was born in 1950 in London, where he
continues to live and work.
There will be a publication to coincide with the exhibition,
with essays by Will Self and Professor Stephen Levinson and an interview
between the artist and Iwona Blazwick. There is also a programme
of events planned around
the exhibition.
The exhibition is generously supported by the Henry
Moore Foundation. |