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Henry Moore Studios & Gardens is currently closed for winter, reopening on 1 April 2026.

Sam Metz, 'Ciliated Sense' 2025 (audio description)

A large plywood sculpture in the shape of a spinning top. The top is divided into radial sections with wires criss-crossing between. Washers are suspended on the wires, which clank together as the sculpture is moved.

Sam Metz, 'Ciliated Sense' 2025 (audio description) Audio description

Stop 12, track 2

Audio description of Sam Metz’s Ciliated Sense 2025.

Audio description for Sam Metz, 'Ciliated Sense' 2025 (audio description) read by Stop 12, track 2

Transcript

Stop 12. Track 2.
Sam Metz, Ciliated Sense 2025

A giant fighting spinning top. A tactile clock. A radial city plan from a fantasy novel. A playground roundabout. A spiderweb. A rattling maze with a ball bearing coursing through it. A game I don’t know how to win. An alien musical instrument.

Ciliated Sense is a hemisphere that is somehow made of angled planes. Although the object has the appearance of a large ball cut not quite in half – but below its midline – it is in fact made entirely of straight lines and flat planes. Like an abandoned parasol that has blown over in the wind, it rests at a shallow angle on the floor in the corner of the gallery.

It is made from pale plywood that looks untreated apart from yellow areas on the top layer, the same colour as a highlighter pen, that indicate the best places to push the structure. It appears to have been assembled like flat pack furniture, held together in tension by wires of varying thickness. Ten intersecting radial spines support three horizontal planes that together describe the geometry of the implied hemisphere, like longitudinal and latitudinal planes of a transparent globe cut off somewhere below the equator.

The invitation to touch offers an extra dimension both with sound and movement. The angles at its base mean that the structure can wobble but not fall over. It seems to be weighted so that it rights itself when you push down on the highlighted sections, and it always returns to the same position, leaning to one side. And the noise! Harsh, metallic, like a toolbox falling over and scattering its contents. Strung through the structure there are wires of varying thickness. Some are thin and high pitched. Others, towards the centre of the structure, are thicker – guitar strings maybe. The strings have washers of different sizes threaded onto them that clatter around as you move the object. Some are small and look as though they would be useful but others are so large it’s hard to imagine what they might be for. You can move them individually to make different sounds. Different types of string make different sounds as the washers bounce and scrape along them – aliens, clangers, or the sounds from a tool shed. When you tip the whole structure the noise becomes louder. Are they pleasant sounds? Maybe not.

The position of the sculpture in the corner, in the middle of a carpeted area, might make you think of a playground, as though you’re approaching a roundabout on a safe, soft surface to kneel or sit on. But the object itself is not soft at all, more like a wooden model for a tank or an armoured vehicle fashioned in Da Vinci’s workshop.

End of Stop 12, Track 2.

Additional track

Exhibition

Find out more about Beyond the Visual, the UK’s first major sculpture exhibition in which blind and partially blind practitioners are central to the curatorial process and make up the majority of participating artists.

Beyond the Visual
Close up of hands holding a plaster digestive biscuit with braille text and lettering reading 'comma'. Many more biscuits are on the table in front, featuring a variety of different words.

Exhibition

Beyond the Visual

Learn more

Sculpture Galleries and Study Gallery
Henry Moore Institute, Leeds

Audio guide

Discover more works in the exhibition with our audio guide.