Exhibition
Some Steel: Sculpture and Steel in Britain, 1960-90
Leeds Art Gallery, UK
This exhibition traces the relationship between sculpture and steel over a period of thirty years, from display in the gallery to post-industrial, artist-run spaces.
Sculptor Garth Evans describes himself as ‘one of the few people around that didn’t work in steel’ during the late 1960s. Popularised by Anthony Caro and the New Generation sculptors (named after the influential New Generation exhibitions at Whitechapel Gallery, London in the early 1960s), the use of steel came to dominate sculpture in Britain during this period and was closely associated with the sculpture department of St Martin’s School of Art in London, where Evans taught.
While at St Martin’s, Evans completed a fellowship with the British Steel Corporation arranged through the Artist Placement Group, an organisation founded in 1965 that placed artists in government, commercial and industrial settings. New to working with steel as a sculptural material, Evans used the fellowship to visit and photograph steelworks around the country to familiarise himself with various production methods. A selection of his photographs was published by British Steel as the photobook Some Steel in 1971.
Evans found great difficulty in working with steel. After more than a year of fruitless effort, the large floor-hugging Breakdown 1971 emerged. Made from lengths of hollow rectangular steel, it measured twenty-five feet by twenty-two feet and occupied the entire studio. He used the material again for his public sculpture in Cardiff as part of the City Sculpture Project in 1972. Resembling an industrial tool, the black painted steel sculpture offered an oblique tribute to the coal mining and steel-making industries of South Wales. Steel sculptures by Kenneth Martin and Bernard Schottlander were also sited in Sheffield as part of the City Sculpture Project.
Using steel to connect with industrial heritage and geography was a strategy seen in other public art commissions during the 1980s and 1990s. In Bottle of Notes by artists Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen, unveiled in Middlesbrough in September 1993, eight tons of mild steel provided by British Steel formed a ‘bottle’ that recalled the town’s tradition of working with both iron and steel. Despite the decline of the steel industry, the 1990s saw the opening of a dedicated museum for steel sculpture: the Ironbridge Open Air Museum of Steel Sculpture in Shropshire, established by artists Pam Brown and Roy Kitchin.
Beginning with examples of the brightly coloured abstract steel sculpture typical of the early 1960s, including works by Neville Boden, this display traces the relationship between sculpture and steel over a period of thirty years, from the gallery to artist-run spaces, to the street and the outdoor museum, from metropolitan London to the post-industrial North.
Image: A model posing with Neville Boden Sculpture’. Copyright Leeds Museums & Galleries, presented by the Estate of Neville Boden
National Life Stories Sound Point
National Life Stories was established in 1987 to document the lives of people living in Britain by recording life story oral history interviews. Housed at the British Library, the National Life Stories Artists’ Lives series provides a unique resource for those exploring the lives of artists within the wider context of British society.
Henry Moore Institute’s partnership with National Life Stories provides access to a number of interviews with sculptors from Artists’ Lives, which can be listened to in the Institute’s Research Library, located on the first floor.
We are currently preparing new extracts for the Sound Point, which will launch alongside this exhibition.
For information about National Life Stories and how to access to the recordings, please contact oralhistory@bl.uk or visit www.bl.uk/nls.
About the Archive Gallery
The Archive Gallery is a designated space to explore material from the Archive of Sculptors’ Papers, alongside works from the Leeds Sculpture Collections.
The Archive began in 1982 when the long-standing partnership between the Henry Moore Foundation and Leeds City Council led to the creation of the Henry Moore Centre for the Study of Sculpture within Leeds Art Gallery. The Centre, which was based in what is now the Archive Gallery and Mezzanine, sought to build and develop the existing sculpture collections. It also enabled the acquisition of works on paper, preparatory and archive material that could tell the story of the evolution of sculptural practice in Britain.
Since 1993 the Archive has been based at the Henry Moore Institute. Over the past four decades, it has contributed to numerous research studies, fellowships, publications, artistic interventions and exhibitions around the world. With over 330 collections, this unique research facility contains a wealth of material relating to sculpture in Britain, from the eighteenth century to the present day. The working lives of hundreds of sculptors are captured through photographs, correspondence and sketchbooks, alongside film, digital records and even tools and costumes. The Archive also holds material relating to the businesses and institutions involved in sculptural practice, ranging from foundries to public art commissioners. Together with the related collections of maquettes, models, works on paper and library holdings, it aims to represent sculpture across its different manifestations and forms of production.
Visit the Archive of Sculptors’ Papers
The Archive of Sculptors’ Papers is free to use and welcomes all visitors. It is open Monday to Friday by appointment, 10:00–17:00.
Find out more and plan your visit
Admissions
Leeds Art Gallery is now a Give What You Can gallery. We invite visitors to donate to support the gallery if you are able.
Donations can be made via the Tap to Give donations points on arrival or during your visit with contactless, Chip and Pin, cash and coins.
Getting here
This exhibition is located in the Archive Gallery in Leeds Art Gallery, which you can get to by crossing the bridge link from the Henry Moore Institute.
Leeds Art Gallery is open Tuesday to Saturday, 10:00–17:00, and Sunday, 11:00–15:00.
Leeds Art Gallery
The Headrow
Leeds
LS1 3AA
United Kingdom
T: 0113 378 5350
E: art.gallery@leeds.gov.uk