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Isaac Lythgoe: The truth is only what we get away with

Contemporary sculpture of a goat-like creature with a ball held in its mouth, standing upright on its hind legs with its front legs resting on a chair.

Isaac Lythgoe: The truth is only what we get away with Audio guide

Phantasmagoria: Stop 9

Isaac Lythgoe considers the reality of sculpture in a post-truth era in this work of a goat leaning on a chair blowing bubble gum.

Audio description for Isaac Lythgoe: The truth is only what we get away with read by Phantasmagoria: Stop 9

Transcript

Stop 9.

Hi, I’m Isaac Lythgoe and I’m a sculptor.

In The truth is only what we get away with, a goat stands with his front two feet on a chair. His head is turned and he’s blowing a large bubble gum. The work is a composite of materials. The hooves are cast aluminium. The body of the goat is fibreglass and pigments and paint. And as we turn around the goat, we see that his skin hinges open and internally reveals a network of pipe and engineered parts. These parts, although they appear metal, like many other parts around the sculpture, they’re in fact plastic and painted in a chrome finish that is often used in prop making. When we come down the goat’s front two feet onto the chair, we see a chair that is made from carved oak and cast aluminium and goat rawhide, which is stretched much like you’d stretch a drum. The goat rawhide has a translucent quality pick through the light.

Texturally, everything in this work is soft. Matte finishes really blur the… it’s hard to determine exactly what materials are what. It came out of the idea that a currency that is sort of spread through culture seems to be an acceptance that not everything is as it seems, and that the area that seems to define politics and culture in a broader sense is this idea of post-truth. And I find it somewhat strange that we call an era of post-truth when we have more resources to fact check anything than ever before. And so I really wanted to make a figure that at once felt present and alive and also told its own lies. It is a goat coyishly blowing, a big bubble gum. And then when you turn around the work, it really reveals itself to not be that at all. It’s roboticised, it’s fabricated. It’s not. It’s an illusion.

This is the end of Stop 9.

Exhibition

Find out more about Phantasmagoria: Folkloric Sculpture for the Digital Age, an exhibition bringing together a new generation of artists who explore how digital technologies are reshaping what sculpture can be, and how it can be used to tell stories about our past, present, and future.

Phantasmagoria: Folkloric Sculpture for the Digital Age
A futuristic or alien room, featuring wall-mounted display screens showing images of human and alien faces. The walls and other surfaces look to be made of a dark metal, lit by neon greens and reds.

Exhibition

Phantasmagoria: Folkloric Sculpture for the Digital Age

Learn more

Sculpture Galleries
Henry Moore Institute, Leeds

Audio guide

Discover more works in the exhibition with our audio guide.