Phyllida Barlow: An Age of Fallen Monuments

  Рет қаралды 22,428

Louisiana Channel

Louisiana Channel

10 жыл бұрын

"All our lives are about constantly losing. The moment is always disappearing, like sand between our fingers. So what is it, we are actually left with?," asks British sculptor Phyllida Barlow.
The language of sculpture is not about perfection or exactness, according to Phyllida Barlow (b. 1944). It's about approximation, about recovering moments. "I like the language of sculpture which is about space and time, smell and temperature. Opposite photography, sculpture constantly rejects the single image because of the way you walk around it. Oddly enough sculpture, despite it's physicality, constantly disappears. You walk past it and it's gone. You come back to it and you discover it in a new way. The powerful emotional impact is all in the moment."
Furthermore, Barlow reflects on her recent commission for the enormous Duveen Galleries at Tate Britain - a space that is reminiscent of a cathedral and reflects the pomposity and political power of 19th century Britain. "I wanted to confront the incredible arrogance of that space with something that has gone and disappeared. I have always been interested in fallen monuments. We have lived in a decade and a half now with monuments collapsing. Maybe beginning with the Twin Towers in New York, and going on to the collapse of Saddam Hussein's monuments and then the Buddhas of Afghanistan. That's what fascinates me about sculpture - its idea of monumentalism and its ability to collapse. Something that is slightly off-balance and precarious."
Barlow has been a professor of art for more than forty years. In 2011 she was elected to the Royal Academy. After having retired from teaching at the Slade School of Fine Art, her own artistic career has received a major boost. In an interview with the British newspaper, The Independent, Barlow said: "I wasn't ready 10 to 15 years ago to do that, but when you get older, you finally don't mind if you make a fool of yourself." At the same time, Barlow stays modest: "Let's go back to cave-painting. The desire to bring into those dark spaces an idea of representation, something seen and experienced and recorded - to make evidence of that. And that is what I feel my work is about: evidencing something about the world I am living in now. But it's using a language that I think is as old as the hills."
Phyllida Barlow was interview at her London studio by Marc-Christoph Wagner.
Camera: Matthias Pilz
Edited by: Kamilla Bruus
Produced by: Marc-Christoph Wagner
Supported by Nordea-fonden

Пікірлер: 11
@dawnsteeves
@dawnsteeves Жыл бұрын
I am fascinated with this work and the artist. I think it is, as most art is, important to be experienced in the real, perhaps several times, in order to bring it into perspective. I love the artist's description of her work in the context of British art history, and the way she describes time and gravity as "stuff".
@Olhamo
@Olhamo 3 жыл бұрын
I love this artist’s articulation of the sculptural experience, of walking around it; of “invading a space”, and her comment about bronze sculpture, the consideration of a certain pretence, and acceptance / realization of that : the notion of the vast darkness at the centre of a hollow bronze ! Also, what she said about cave art had me seeing it in an entirely different *light*, I had never really recognized that the way I am now able to, after this film.
@manuelggrey7511
@manuelggrey7511 5 ай бұрын
Such a beautiful mind❤
@eckosters
@eckosters 3 жыл бұрын
I wish I had 'seen' (experienced, rather) this exhibit!
@judithtaylormayo
@judithtaylormayo Жыл бұрын
Your works makes me think of scafolding that surrounds it}s baby then is taken down. With scafolding in mind, your work then takes me to the far east where they build fabulous buildings with bamboo and how architectual a grass can be. Thank you. My works is about converting the decoration into structure.
@bruceplenderleith838
@bruceplenderleith838 Жыл бұрын
With a bronze the sculpture is the mold or whatever they use to make it, the statue itself if is born from fire, the sculpture burns away, a reverse skeleton of the mold.
@zacka4164
@zacka4164 Жыл бұрын
@Hfvvhbbb
@Hfvvhbbb Жыл бұрын
how much did this cost to build?
@djcb4190
@djcb4190 Жыл бұрын
my art and my AI is different. Amstelman.
@N2O__
@N2O__ Жыл бұрын
13:23 ~ 16:00. 💭🤍
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