Tony Cragg
17 May - 24 Jun 2006
TONY CRAGG
"Sculptures"
Location: 52-54 Bell Street
'As the poet uses the words on the page and the painter the colour on the palette to extend themselves to search for new forms and meanings, the sculptor uses materials as an extension of himself.' Tony Cragg Lisson Gallery announces an exhibition of new bronze, stainless steel and stone works by Tony Cragg previewing Tuesday, 16th May at 52-54 Bell St. From the outset of his career, Cragg has made no secret of his interest in the physics of materials and the dialogue between the material, the artist and the world at large. Like an alchemist or particle physicist, he combines process and energy with the elementary constituents of matter to see how they 'collide'. “The sculptor engages the material with what he knows and comes away knowing more.” Without exception, Cragg's work reveals a rigorous intellectual process and enquiry, resulting in a 'grounded' poetry, at once rational and powerfully ethereal. Cragg's seminal early work incorporated a wide range of objects and materials; found industrial and domestic flotsam from which he assembled his work. In the mid 1980s he began to look at the individual objects he had previously used as parts in 'larger constellations' and decided to make objects 'in which the form makes itself apparent as an external skin.” His recent work in recent years investigates the relationship between the aesthetic world of geometric and biomorphic form, and the aesthetic world of the organic, where natural materials take on synthetic forms and synthetic materials at times look like natural objects. Other works deal with the notions of metamorphosis, evolution, embryology and the metaphoric journey into imperceptibility. In this exhibition Tony Cragg presents 8 new works cast in bronze and stainless steel, as well as stone works made from red Turkish marble and diabas stone. Cragg's method of stacking and layering is a simple, almost elementary technique that belies the sophistication of the final outcome; endlessly varied, often vast, always expressive and full of life. By centring his architectural forms around variable axis, he creates both vertical and horizontal works that infer an animated, gyrating, kinetic energy. From static, inert matter, Cragg creates a visual language that “make(s) dumb material express human thoughts and emotions.” Born in Liverpool, Tony Cragg lives and works in Wuppertal, Germany. He represented Britain at the Venice Biennale in 1988 and was awarded the prestigious Turner Prize in the following year. In 2002 he received the prestigious Piepenbrock Award for Sculpture and was awarded the CBE for services to art in 2001. He has exhibited extensively and has had major solo shows at the Tate Gallery, London (1989), Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven (1991), Concoran Gallery of Art, Washington (1991), Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofia, Madrid (1995), Lenbachhaus, Munich (1998), Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris (1996), Whitechapel Gallery, London (1997) the Tate Gallery, Liverpool (2001), “Chalk Pit“, Cass Sculpture Foundation, West Sussex, (2004/05).
© Tony Cragg
Bad Guys, 2005
Bronze, 68 x 84 x 86 cm
"Sculptures"
Location: 52-54 Bell Street
'As the poet uses the words on the page and the painter the colour on the palette to extend themselves to search for new forms and meanings, the sculptor uses materials as an extension of himself.' Tony Cragg Lisson Gallery announces an exhibition of new bronze, stainless steel and stone works by Tony Cragg previewing Tuesday, 16th May at 52-54 Bell St. From the outset of his career, Cragg has made no secret of his interest in the physics of materials and the dialogue between the material, the artist and the world at large. Like an alchemist or particle physicist, he combines process and energy with the elementary constituents of matter to see how they 'collide'. “The sculptor engages the material with what he knows and comes away knowing more.” Without exception, Cragg's work reveals a rigorous intellectual process and enquiry, resulting in a 'grounded' poetry, at once rational and powerfully ethereal. Cragg's seminal early work incorporated a wide range of objects and materials; found industrial and domestic flotsam from which he assembled his work. In the mid 1980s he began to look at the individual objects he had previously used as parts in 'larger constellations' and decided to make objects 'in which the form makes itself apparent as an external skin.” His recent work in recent years investigates the relationship between the aesthetic world of geometric and biomorphic form, and the aesthetic world of the organic, where natural materials take on synthetic forms and synthetic materials at times look like natural objects. Other works deal with the notions of metamorphosis, evolution, embryology and the metaphoric journey into imperceptibility. In this exhibition Tony Cragg presents 8 new works cast in bronze and stainless steel, as well as stone works made from red Turkish marble and diabas stone. Cragg's method of stacking and layering is a simple, almost elementary technique that belies the sophistication of the final outcome; endlessly varied, often vast, always expressive and full of life. By centring his architectural forms around variable axis, he creates both vertical and horizontal works that infer an animated, gyrating, kinetic energy. From static, inert matter, Cragg creates a visual language that “make(s) dumb material express human thoughts and emotions.” Born in Liverpool, Tony Cragg lives and works in Wuppertal, Germany. He represented Britain at the Venice Biennale in 1988 and was awarded the prestigious Turner Prize in the following year. In 2002 he received the prestigious Piepenbrock Award for Sculpture and was awarded the CBE for services to art in 2001. He has exhibited extensively and has had major solo shows at the Tate Gallery, London (1989), Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven (1991), Concoran Gallery of Art, Washington (1991), Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofia, Madrid (1995), Lenbachhaus, Munich (1998), Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris (1996), Whitechapel Gallery, London (1997) the Tate Gallery, Liverpool (2001), “Chalk Pit“, Cass Sculpture Foundation, West Sussex, (2004/05).
© Tony Cragg
Bad Guys, 2005
Bronze, 68 x 84 x 86 cm