Antony Gormley
Antony Gormley’s sculptures, installations, drawings, and public artworks seek to illustrate the human body’s relation to space and time. Studying Buddhism in Sri Lanka and India between 1971 and 1974 inspired his tactile connection to conceptual questions. He often casts his own body as the starting point for his sculptural works, which go on to include cast iron, wire, shellac, or casein and shellac on paper. The figure is often abstracted—be it simplified into a boxy, geometric tower that expands aggressively into space or a ghostly figure situated in the middle of a contained electron cloud, among other forms. His public sculptures are interactive and often provoke the viewer to question unexpected uses of space, from steel figures peering down at his viewer from a rooftop or a public sculpture created, one hour at a time, by the audience itself. Gormley believes in “corporeal potentiality,” and his work highlights his viewer’s human ability to occupy and destroy objects in space. His poignant sculptures unite an obtuse spiritual quality with reference to the historical and cultural specificity of the human figure.
Gormley has exhibited at institutions including Centrum Paul Klee, Bern, Centro Cultural Banco do Brasil, Sao Paulo, State Hermitage Museum, …
Antony Gormley’s sculptures, installations, drawings, and public artworks seek to illustrate the human body’s relation to space and time. Studying Buddhism in Sri Lanka and India between 1971 and 1974 inspired his tactile connection to conceptual questions. He often casts his own body as the starting point for his sculptural works, which go on to include cast iron, wire, shellac, or casein and shellac on paper. The figure is often abstracted—be it simplified into a boxy, geometric tower that expands aggressively into space or a ghostly figure situated in the middle of a contained electron cloud, among other forms. His public sculptures are interactive and often provoke the viewer to question unexpected uses of space, from steel figures peering down at his viewer from a rooftop or a public sculpture created, one hour at a time, by the audience itself. Gormley believes in “corporeal potentiality,” and his work highlights his viewer’s human ability to occupy and destroy objects in space. His poignant sculptures unite an obtuse spiritual quality with reference to the historical and cultural specificity of the human figure.
Gormley has exhibited at institutions including Centrum Paul Klee, Bern, Centro Cultural Banco do Brasil, Sao Paulo, State Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg, MACRO, Rome, Garage Center for Contemporary Culture, Moscow, Kunsthall Rotterdam, the Netherlands, ICA, Singapore, Guangdong Museum of Contemporary Art, China, Yale Centre for British Art, New Haven, Connecticut, The British Museum, London, Tate St. Ives, United Kingdom, and Obala Art Center, Sarajevo, among many others. He has had a public sculpture at Madison Square Park in New York (2010) and the Fourth Plinth in Trafalgar Square, London (2009), among others. Gormley also participated in the Venice Biennale in 1986 and 1982, The International Sculpture Biennale in 2010 and 2008, and the Gwangju Biennale in 2000 and 1995, among other international presentations. He was awarded the Turner Prize in 1994, the South Bank Prize for Visual Art in 1999, and official Knighthood for Services to the Arts in 2014.
British Museum, London, United Kingdom
Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh, United Kingdom
Tate Gallery, London, United Kingdom
Victoria and Albert Museum, London, United Kingdom
National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, Australia
Museum of Modern Art, Vienna, Austria
Montreal Musee des Beaux Arts, Canada
Guangdong Museum of Contemporary Art, Guangzhou, China
Arlen Museum of Modern Art, Denmark
Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris, France
Neue Museum, Kassel, Germany
Kunsthalle Bremen, Germany
Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin, Ireland
Galleria de Arte Moderna, Turin, Italy
Israel Museum, Jerusalem, Israel
Nagoya City Art Museum, Japan
The National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo, Japan
Tokushima Art Museum, Japan
Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, California
Walker Arts Centre, Minneapolis, Minnesota
Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego, California
State Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg, Russia
White Cube, London, United Kingdom
Sean Kelly Gallery, New York, New York
Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, Paris, France
Xavier Hufkens Gallery, Brussels, Belgium