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Statuephilia – Contemporary sculptors at the British Museum

 

 

British Museum

The British Museum

Statuephilia – Contemporary sculptors at the British

4 October 2008 – 25 January 2009

The British Museum showcases a group of major works by leading contemporary British artists in a series of installations paying tribute to the cultural significance of sculpture across the ages

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The British Museum houses one of the greatest sculpture collections in the world. This autumn, it will showcase a group of major works by leading contemporary British artists in a series of installations paying tribute to the cultural significance of sculpture across the ages.

Works by Damien Hirst, Antony Gormley, Ron Mueck, Marc Quinn and Noble and Webster will highlight the perennial potency of sculpture and remind visitors to the Museum of the extraordinary unbroken history of this art form and its unique relationship to human history. Statuephilia complements a major new television series on the history of sculpture, The Sculpture Diaries, produced by ZCZ films and to be broadcast on Channel 4 in the autumn. Statuephilia has been selected by Sunday Times art critic and presenter of the Sculpture Diaries Waldemar Januszczak in association with the British Museum.

Each work will be sited in a different gallery within the Museum, located so as to create an arresting juxtaposition with the stunning works that make up the Museum’s permanent collection. For over 250 years, the collection has been an inspiration for contemporary artists, providing a rare opportunity to view sculpture from as far a field as Mexico, Easter Island, Nigeria, Greece, North America, Polynesia, China and India. Henry Moore famously declared ‘nine-tenths of my understanding and learning about sculpture came from the British Museum’. By providing a new context for outstanding examples of contemporary sculpture the project will facilitate visual dialogue with traditions from different eras and encourage the public to engage with them in novel ways.

Damien Hirst will commandeer the historic wall cases of the Enlightenment Gallery and fill them with 200 specially created skulls. The resulting work, Cornucopia, will address Hirst’s perennial fascination with death, while also commenting on the very legitimacy of collection and display. These objects are the first of their kind for Hirst, and will premiere at the British Museum.

Antony Gormley’s Case for an Angel I – a precursor to his most celebrated public sculpture, Angel of the North – will fill the entire Front Hall of the Museum. Raised high on a plinth, and boasting a 9-metre wingspan, it is itself monumental, and will provide clear links with the Egyptian, Assyrian and Classical statuary that the Museum holds in abundance, and inspired Gormley to become a sculptor in the first place. Antony Gormley is a Trustee of the British Museum.

Ron Mueck will show Mask II, his widely exhibited sleeping Self-Portrait, in the heart of the ‘Living and Dying: Wellcome Trust Gallery’ with the Museum’s monumental Maoi. The giant head, lying on its side, brings to mind Easter Island’s mysterious history, only recently solved after two centuries of speculation.

Marc Quinn’s solid gold statue, Siren, of supermodel Kate Moss – icon of contemporary beauty and Aphrodite of our times – will find fitting setting at the centre of the Nereid Gallery, interacting with the great Greek beauties that surround it. Quinn’s work is the largest gold statue since Ancient Egypt and will premiere at the Museum.

Noble and Webster have sculpted an entirely new phantasmagoric silhouette work inspired by the surroundings of the Museum’s world-renowned Egyptian Sculpture Gallery. “The work is assembled from our collection of naturally mummified animal parts, tiny little creatures teased and tortured by our feral farmyard cat, that when assembled will cast a shadow of our profiles onto the walls of the ancient Egyptian galleries”.

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Statuephilia - Contemporary sculptors at the British Museum