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Maquette cast
Maquette cast






maquette cast

Kittleman, Total Strangers, Ostfildern-Ruit 1999, p. When made still in sculpture it can be witness to life and, as you say, it can talk about this time now' (A. As he once emphasised, 'the body is language before language. Gormley has consistently emphasised the significance of physical interaction. In this way, as with the spatial intervention of Richard Serra's Tilted Arc (1981), the sculpture encourages the viewer to consider space, and the nature of his or her own body. With the angel's wings seamlessly welded to the sculpted body at eye level, the sculpture imposes a physical barrier, blocking the viewer's optical horizon. In creating the maquette on a human scale, Gormley invites the viewer to interact with an inert being of roughly the same shape and size, whose perfect silence prompts self-reflection. As he once suggested: 'I want the body to be a sensing mechanism, so your response to the work does not have to be pre-informed and does not necessarily encourage discourse' (A. Rather than privileging the eye as the primary channel of communication, Gormley seeks through his sculpture to activate space and invoke a 'psycho-physical' response from its viewers. Gombrich, Antony Gormley, London 2000, p. My work tries to create a place of feeling which is in contrast to objective rationalism' (A. As he explains, 'the world is understood as an object out there, of vision requiring distance which promotes knowledge. For Gormley, a central premise of sculpture is to reinvigorate the dialogue between the body and space by challenging the legacy of the Enlightenment and its empiricist regime. Standing with head raised and chest open, the sculpture channels the confidence and serenity of Cycladic Greek sculpture, celebrating the 'imaginative space inside the body' (A. Its shape borrows the physique of the sculptor himself, who created the mould using his own body as a pattern. 120).Ĭonstructed out of cool, cast iron, its material is both industrial and organic, beautifully variegated by the elements.

maquette cast

The work attempts by starting with a real body in real time to face space and eternity.' (A. Whilst Gormley denies religious symbolism, he acknowledges that the work 'comes from the same source as the need for religion: wanting to face existence and discover meaning. At the same time it draws an allegory between the aeroplane and the elevation of the human spirit. Across the shoulder blades and spanning the torso of the elegant figure grow long, ribbed wings, less biomorphic than aeronautic.Īngel of the North takes this relationship between man and machine and reflects on the way that the body is extended by technology. The body of the sculpture with its noble, upright posture is positively human in spite of its industrial material and facture the lines of its contours recalling the curves of the bicep or calves with close precision. Gesturing its wings and heart towards the heavens, its feet are resolutely anchored to the ground, a result of the gravity acting heavily upon its solid metal figure.

maquette cast

Gormley quoted in http:/).īorn out of the artist's early A Case for an Angel (1989-1990) series, Angel of the North represents a celebration of earth and sky, the corporeal and the ethereal. The angel has three functions - firstly a historic one to remind us that below this site coal miners worked in the dark for two hundred years, secondly to grasp hold of the future, expressing our transition from the industrial to the information age, and lastly to be a focus for our hopes and fears' (A. As the artist himself has elaborated, 'people are always asking, why an angel? The only response I can give is that no-one has ever seen one and we need to keep imagining them. Rising twenty meters from the ground and spanning fifty-four meters from tip to tip, the Gateshead project was cast out of 200 tonnes of steel and was conceived as a national emblem and beacon for the North of England.

MAQUETTE CAST SERIES

This human scale maquette is one of a series of five sculptures that prefigure the colossal Gateshead project that Gormley completed in 1998. With its human height and massive wingspan of more than five metres, Angel of the North, executed in 1996, is the iconic figurehead of Antony Gormley's internationally acclaimed oeuvre. Gormley et al., Making an Angel, London 1998, p. 'More than any other work that I have been involved with, the Angel exhibits sculptures ability to endure.' (A.Gormley quoted in A.








Maquette cast