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Press Release
26 March 2008
GREATEST LIVING ABSTRACT SCULPTOR
SHOWS FOR THE FIRST TIME FOUR PORTRAIT HEADS OF HIS WIFE
The man who took sculpture
off the plinth now puts the portrait back on a pedestal - National
Portrait Gallery displays Sir Anthony Caro's figurative busts
for the first time
Four heads in bronze and steel
by Sir Anthony Caro, who is widely regarded as Britain's greatest
living sculptor, go on display for the first time this weekend
at the National Portrait Gallery. The portrait sculptures depicting
the artist's wife Sheila, were made in 1988-89, a major instance
of the occasional ventures into figurative work for an artist
whose reputation is closely linked with abstract sculpture.
Famed for his pioneering sculptures
in welded steel, Caro's epic but tender busts reveal a little
known aspect of the celebrated artist's work and will be placed
on specially built beech-wood plinths for their unveiling at
the National Portrait Gallery's Balcony Gallery.
The display was conceived by
Paul Moorhouse, the Gallery's 20th Century Curator. and comprises
a sequence of heads of Caro's wife of 58 years, the painter Sheila
Girling. Individually the heads are titled Day, Night, Morning
and Evening, hinting at the different moods evoked by
each piece. While Tate Britain's Caro retrospective of 2005 -
curated by Paul Moorhouse - showed the sculptor's key abstract
works, this new display offers a fresh perspective by focusing
on Caro's recent figurative work.
Paul Moorhouse says: 'These extraordinary
sculptures appear initially to contradict the very basis on which
Caro's reputation rests. At a deeper level, however, these portraits
- like his abstract sculptures - are suffused by a vital marriage
of feeling and imagination.'
From the early 1960s, Anthony
Caro (b1924) has been a hugely influential figure in the development
of abstract sculpture. It is an area in which he continues to
innovate, producing sculptures that test the limits of expression,
often using pieces of found scrap steel welded together in arrangements
the appeal of which is both cerebral and sensuous.
Since the mid-1980s, Caro's work
has proceeded on an ever-broadening front, achieving a remarkable
diversity in a range of materials including steel, bronze, lead,
ceramic, silver, wood and paper. A little known aspect of this
refusal to be tied to a single way of working has been his occasional
return to figurative imagery.
Preceding his radical breakthrough
to abstraction in 1960, the human figure was a principal preoccupation
of Caro's art. In the last 20 years he has returned to this
motif, making drawings and sculptures that are a response to
an observed model or sitter.
The Caro display will be complemented
by a special edition pack of postcards of the works together
with a portrait of Sir Anthony Caro and accompanying text by
Paul Moorhouse.
Anthony Caro Portraits is a loan display at the National Portrait
Gallery, 21 March - 7 September 2008
For further press information please contact: Neil Evans,
Press Office, National Portrait Gallery Tel 020 7312 2452 or
07790 428638 (not for publication) Email nevans@npg.org.uk
National Portrait Gallery, St Martin's Place, WC2H 0HE opening
hours: Saturday-Wednesday: 10am - 6pm (Gallery
closure commences at 5.50pm) Late Opening: Thursday, Fridays:10am
- 9pm (Gallery closure commences at 8.50pm) Recorded information:
020 7312 2463 General information: 020 7306 0055 Website:
www.npg.org.uk
NOTES TO EDITORS:
Large Head of Sheila - Night
Sir Anthony Caro 1988-9,
560 x 535 x 455mm
Private Collection
© Barford Sculptures Ltd, Photographer T McMillan
Large Head of Sheila - Day
Sir Anthony Caro 1988-9,
535 x 635 x 510mm
Private Collection
© Barford Sculptures Ltd, Photographer T McMillan
Large Head of Sheila - Morning
Sir Anthony Caro 1988-9,
645 x 735 x 585 mm
On loan - Private Collection
© Barford Sculptures Ltd, Photographer T McMillan
Large Head of Sheila - Evening
Sir Anthony Caro 1988-9,
645 x 735 x 585 mm
Private Collection
© Barford Sculptures Ltd, Photographer T McMillan
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