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Monday, November 25, 2024 |
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Hauser & Wirth Somerset marks 10th anniversary with exhibition by Phyllida Barlow |
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Installation view, Phyllida Barlow. unscripted, Hauser & Wirth Somerset, 2024 © Phyllida Barlow Estate. Courtesy Phyllida Barlow Estate and Hauser & Wirth. Photo: Ken Adlard.
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LONDON.- The work of Phyllida Barlow (1944 - 2023) takes over Hauser & Wirth Somerset in a celebration of the British artists transformative approach to sculpture; marking the gallerys 10th anniversary that was inaugurated by Barlows solo exhibition GIG in 2014. Over a career that spanned six decades, Barlow took inspiration from her surroundings to create imposing installations that can be at once menacing and playful. Barlows restless invented forms stretch the limits of mass, volume and height as they block, straddle and balance precariously. The audience is constantly challenged into a new relationship with the sculptural object, the gallery environment and the world beyond.
Curated by Frances Morris, Phyllida Barlow. unscripted brings together a collection of the artists signature elements from several major installations, as well as a number of free-standing sculptures ranging from the early 1970s to work made in the last year of Barlows life. The landscape, courtyards and garden beyond the galleries are animated and disrupted by a selection of sculptures, including PRANK, a series of seven wonderfullyand deliberatelyungainly sculptures Barlow made for New Yorks City Hall Park in 2023, shown for the first time in the UK. The exhibition also features previously unseen smaller-scale works, including drawings and maquettes. These works reinforce the important role the studio played in Barlows practice, whilst conveying the restless energy, endless curiosity and unabated ambition which are as much a part of Barlows legacy as the works themselves.
Over the last ten years, Phyllida Barlow kept her fans and followers on the edge of their seats as she brought new and ever more audacious projects to life in venues across the world. Unfolding as a running commentary on the tragedies and absurdities of our time, each work formed part of an ongoing and intensely experimental investigation into the techniques and materials of art making, seeking visual equivalents to her own personal experience of living and looking.Frances Morris, 2024
The Bourgeois gallery opens the exhibition with singular works that span almost four decades of Barlows career, ranging from the remake of shedmesh, 1975 2020 (1975 2020), to two of the artists last works, untitled: hollow; 2022 (2022) and untitled: modernsculpture; 2022 (2022). These works are part of a continuous investigation of the language and possibilities of sculpture, which emerged as Barlow found her voice as a student through exploring the legacy of British and European post-war sculpture. Key works in this display make references to other artists who became part of her internal conversation for many years, notably Alighiero Boetti, Eva Hesse and Tony Smith. These works engage critically with the grid and cube of minimalism, post-minimalisms resistance to geometry and the materiality of Arte Povera.
In contrast, the Rhoades Gallery combines large-scale elements originally conceived for several different installations including folly (2017), Barlows acclaimed British Pavilion for the 57th Venice Biennale in 2017. This gallery engages with the artists ongoing interest in states of urban destruction and unrest, reflecting on Barlows fascination for natural and human-driven disaster, stretching back to her memories of bomb-damaged London, as well as her interest in fallen monuments. During her final years, Barlow was increasingly recycling elements of one project into another, or enabling individual items a future life liberated from its original context. This gallery takes this habit as its methodology; key gatherings of works are inspired by juxtapositions Barlow made from disparate parts which can be found in photographic documentation of her exhibitions. Other choices and sequences take care to respect some of Barlows key principles and preferences, for example she preferred to block entrances and exits, inducing curiosity in the viewer. She often placed obstacles in the way of visitors, in their pathway or disturbing their line of sight.
There were periods in Barlows life where her principal activity as an artist took place in the studio. This was the case for months and years during her teaching career when significant exhibition opportunities were harder to come by, whilst raising a young family, and more recently during lockdown. The Pigsty gallery focuses on these more private aspects of Barlows practice and speak to forms of open experimentation. TORSO and LOAF (1986 1989) are among the earliest works included, alongside maquettes and drawings that have never been shown in public. The works represent motifs repeatedly explored in her sculpture, including several works on display elsewhere in the exhibition, while others touch on primary themes and interests in her art and life. Barlows first and last group of paintings on canvas are also on display. Small-scale and captivating, the painterly experiments were part of a move to larger-scale canvases that were to be debuted in this very exhibition.
Over the course of a long career there were images and forms, materials and subjects that occurred over and over in Barlows work and held a special significance for her. The Workshop gallery foregrounds untitled: double act (2010), and combines two adjacent spheres each speared by a vertical intrusion, one in the form of a ring, the other a disc. The reference to theatre in the title evokes Barlows longstanding interest in theatre and the staging of her work for audiences. Here the double act, was effectively an in conversation with Nairy Baghramian who she exhibited alongside at the Serpentine Gallery the same year, and point to Barlows continuing interest in and responsiveness to her peers.
The title unscripted refers to the experimental and iterative nature of Barlows working process, allowing each project to evolve through a process of making, unmaking and remaking, involving chance and mishap as well as changes of mind. She saw this working practice as akin to processes of growth, decay and renewal in nature. Barlow was aware of the forthcoming exhibition and had begun to think seriously about bringing her interest in painting to the fore.
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