Alison Mary Wilding OBE, RA (born 7 July 1948)[1] is an English artist noted for her multimedia abstract sculptures. Wilding's work has been displayed in galleries internationally.[1]
English artist
Alison Wilding
'On the Day' by Alison Wilding
Born
1948 (age73–74)
Blackburn, Lancashire, U.K.
Nationality
British
Knownfor
Sculpture
Life
Wilding was born in Blackburn, Lancashire.[2] Between 1966 and 1967 she studied at the Nottingham College of Art, then at the Ravensbourne College of Art and Design in Chislehurst from 1967 to 1970[3] and, from 1970 to 1973, the Royal College of Art in London. Her artistic career gained momentum in the 1980s when she was part of a group of sculptors including Anthony Gormley and Richard Deacon.[4]
Wilding was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 2019 New Year Honours, for services to art.
Since 2018 she has been the Eranda Professor of Drawing at the Royal Academy Schools.[1] She lives and works in London,[4] and has been represented by Karsten Schubert for over 30 years.[5]
Career and work
Alison Wilding, Untitled (Angry Drawing IV), 1988, charcoal, oil crayon and gouache on paper, 420 × 593 mm
Wilding's interest in sculpture was established during her time at the Nottingham College of Art.[2] Her early influences include Constantin Brâncusi and ideas of simple construction.[4]
She has used traditional materials, often found as reused, such as wood, stone and bronze, alongside others like steel, wax, silk, and rubber.[4] These are often used in unusual combinations: Stormy Weather (1987), for example, is made from pigment, beeswax and oil rubbed into galvanised steel. Of her eclectic media, Wilding has said "I like stuff and not particular materials."[6] Wilding's work typically includes two opposing materials purposed with representing positive and negative forces, creating a balance within the art.[7] She maintains that she is conscious of waste and does not like to produce work that will not be displayed.[4]
Wilding self-archives her work, personally giving them unique numbers and descriptions that are logged in small black notebooks.[4] The notebooks also contain key details of her work, such as early designs and logs of her making progress.[4] She has expressed that she would like the books to be destroyed rather than leave them to an institution despite requests from organisations such as the Henry Moore Institute.[4]
In addition to sculpture, Wilding has also produced a variety of artworks on paper. On drawings, she says: 'The thing I like about drawings is that they can float. You don’t think about gravity. They do something really different. That is the freedom and pleasure of drawing for me. You are not weighed down by the material world in the same way. So, maybe, they are more imaginative.'[5]
Wilding's approach to her work is often active and arbitrary, basing her decisions on her current time and place.[8] She also takes a strictly non-political approach to her work, claiming; 'I don’t think art is going to change anyone’s life, not in the way film can do'.[8]
In 1991, a major retrospective of Wilding's work, Alison Wilding: Immersion – Sculpture from Ten Years, was held at Tate Liverpool.[4] She was nominated for the Turner Prize in 1988 (and later in 1992) and received a Henry Moore Fellowship for the British School at Rome in 1988.[5] In 1999 she was made a Royal Academician.[10] Her only large-scale public artwork "Ambit" was installed in the River Wear at Sunderland in 1999, taking the form of a necklace of stainless-steel tubes floating in the river, and lit up from underwater at night. It was subsequently exhibited in the Manchester Ship Canal and is now in storage.
Wilding won a Paul Hamlyn award in 2008. In the same year she won the Charles Wollaston Award presented by the Royal Academy for the most distinguished work in their summer exhibition.[9]
Exhibitions, awards, and collections
Solo exhibitions
Young Friends of the Tate Gallery, Tate Gallery, London, UK (1970)[4]
Tolly Cobold/ Eastern Arts 4th National Exhibition, Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge; Christchurch Mansion, Ipswich; Museum of Modern Art, Oxford; Barbican Art Gallery, London; Talbot Rice Art Centre, Edinburgh; and Leeds City Art Gallery, Leeds, UK (1983)[4]
The Sculpture Show, Serpentine Gallery and The Southbank Centre, London, UK (1983)[4]
Transformations: New Sculpture from Britain, 17th Biennale de Sao Paulo, Museu de Arte Moderna, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; Museo de Arte Moderna, Mexico City, Mexico; Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, Lisbon, Portugal (1983)[4]
Collazione Inglese, Scuola di San Pasquale, Venice, Italy (1984)[4]
Prospect '86: An International Exhibition of Contemporary Art,Frankfurter Kunstvereins, Steinernen Haus am Romerberg, Schirn Kunsthalle, Frankfurt, Germany (1986)[4]
Third Generation Women, Canterbury Fringe Festival, Canterbury, UK (1986)[4]
Brittanica: 30 Ans de Sculpture, Musée des Beaux-Artes André Malraux, Le Havre; L'Ecole D'Architecture de Normandie, Darnétal; Musée D'Évrex, Ancien Éveche, Évrex, France (1988)[4]
Cinquièmes Ateliers Internationaux des Pays de la Loire, Abbaye Royale de Fontevraud, Fontevraud, France (1988)[4]
British Art: The Literate Link, Asher/Faure Gallery, Los Angeles, CA, USA (1988)[4]
Changing Group Exhibition: Gunther Forg, Thomas Grunfeld, Bob Law, Thomas Locher, Ed Ruscha, Tony Tasset, Alison Wilding, Karsten Schubert, London, UK (1988)[4]
Seriös, Gallerie Wanda Reiff, Maastricht, The Netherlands (1988)[4]
Vanitas, Norwich School of Art Gallery, Norwich, UK (1988)[4]
Edinburgh International: Reason and Emotion in Contemporary Art, Royal Scottish Academy, Edinburgh, UK (1988)[4]
Lead, Hirschl & Adler Modern, New York, USA (1988)[4]
Viewpoint: British Art of the 80s, Musée Royaux d’Art et d’Histoire, Brussels, Belgium (1988)[4]
Current Affairs: British Painting and Sculpture in the 1980s, Museum of Modern Art, Oxford, UK, and toured by the British Council to Muscarnok, Budapest, Hungary; Narodni Galerie, Prague, Czech Republic; Zacheta National Gallery of Art, Warsaw, Poland (1988)[4]
Art Brittiskt 1980: Tal, Liljevalchs Konsthall, Stockholm, Sweden and Sarah Hildén Museum, Tampere, Finland (1988)[4]
Beelden en Banieren, Fort Asperen, Acquoy, The Netherlands (1988)[4]
Atlantic Sculpture, Art Centre, College of Design, Pasadena, CA, USA (1988)[4]
Twentieth Century British Sculpture, New Art Centre, Roche Court Sculpture Park, Salisbury, UK (1988)[4]
D. De Cordova, L. Ford, P. Randall-Page, S. Johnson, K. MacCarthy, H. Stylianides, M. Pennie, V. Woropay, A. Wilding, Chelsea School of Art, Manresa Road Gallery, London, UK (1988)[4]
Casting an Eye: Curated by Richard Deacon and Alison Wilding, Cornerhouse Manchester, Manchester UK (1988)[4]
Second Istanbul Biennale, Istanbul, Turkey (1989)[4]
All That Matters: Richard Deacon, Tom Dean, Remo Salvadori, Alison Wilding, Art Gallery of Windsor, Ontario; Mendel Art Gallery, Saskatoon; Saidye Bronfman Centre, Montréal, Canada (1989)[4]
Summer Group Show, Karsten Schubert, London, UK (1992)[4]
New Art Centre, Roche Court Sculpture Park, Salisbury, UK (1992)[4]
Fifth Anniversary Exhibition, Karsten Schubert, London, UK (1992)[4]
The Tuner Prize 1992: Grenville Davey, David Tremlett, Damien Hirst, Alison Wilding, Tate Gallery, London, UK (1992)[4]
Les Collections du Fonds Régional d’Art, Contemporain des Pays de la Loire au Musée des Beaux-Arts de Nantes, Nantes, France (1992)[4]
Recent British Sculpture, Arts Council of Great Britain Touring Exhibition, UK (1993)[4]
Cámaras de Fricción: Pedro Cabrita Reis, Sophie Calle, Alison Wilding, Juan Usle, Galería Luis Adelantado, Valencia, Spain (1993)[4]
Hindsight: Selected Works Made for the Henry Moore Sculpture Trust Studio 1989–93, The Henry Moore Sculpture Trust Studio, Halifax, UK (1993)[4]
Sculpture of the 1980s: Edward Allington, Tony Cragg, Julian Opie, Alison Wilding, Connaught Brown, London, UK (1993)[4]
Informationsdienst, Art Acker, Berlin, Germany (1993)[4]
Made Strange: New British Sculpture, Museum Ludwig, Budapest, Hungary (1993)[4]
Five Works: Keith Coventry, Michael Landy, Bridget Riley, Rachel Whiteread and Alison Wilding, Karsten Schubert, London, UK (1993)[4]
Then and Now: Twenty-Three Years at the Serpentine Gallery, Serpentine Gallery, London, UK (1993)[4]
Inadvertently: Stuart Arends, Judy Fiskin, Llyn Foulkes, Steve Gianakos, Maxwell Hendler, Barbara Kruger, Allan McCollum, Gwynn Murrill, Ellen Phelan, Alison Wilding, Asher Faure Gallery, Los Angeles, CA, US (1993)[4]
In Site: New British Sculpture, The National Museum of Contemporary Art, Oslo, Norway (1993)[4]
Group Show: Keith Coventry, Peter Davis, Anya Gallaccio, Zebedee Jones, Bridget Riley and Alison Wilding, Karsten Schubert, London, UK (1994)[4]
Natural Settings, Chelsea Physic Garden, London, UK (1995)[4]
Cabinet Art, Jason and Rhodes Gallery, London, UK (1995)[4]
British Contemporary Sculpture: From Henry Moore to the 1990s, Auditoria de Galicia, Santiago de Compostela and Fundacio de Serralves, Porto, Spain (1995)[4]
New Art Centre, Roche Court Sculpture Park, Salisbury, UK (1995)[4]
Plastic, Richard Salmon Gallery, London; Arnolfini Gallery, Bristol; and The New Art Gallery, Walsall, UK (1996)[4]
A Sculptor's Choice: Works Selected by Ann Christopher, Royal Academy of Arts, London, UK (1996)[4]
Orte des Möglichen: Weibliche Positionen in der Bildenden Kunst, Achenbach Kunsthandel, Düsseldorf, Germany and Hypobank International S.A., Luxembourg (1996)[4]
British Abstract Art Part 3: Works on Paper, Flowers East, London, UK (1996)[4]
From Figure to Object: A Century of Sculptor's Drawings, Frith Street Gallery and Karsten Schubert, London, UK (1996)[4]
Twelfth Cleveland International Drawing Biennale, Cleveland Gallery, Middlesbrough, UK (1996)[4]
Material Culture: The Object in British Art of the 1980s and 1990s, Hayward Gallery, London, UK (1997)[4]
Building Site, The Architectural Association School of Architecture, London, UK (1997)[4]
Marking Presence, ArtSway, Lymington, Hampshire, UK (1997)[4]
Richard Wentworth's Thinking Aloud, Kettle's Yard, Cambridge and Camden Arts Centre, London, UK (1998)[4]
Forjar el Espacio: La Escultura Forjada del Siglo XX, Centro Atlántico de Arte Moderno, Gran Canaria, Spain (1998)[4]
International Drawing Workshops, RCA Drawing Studio, London, UK (1998)[4]
Interactive: An Exhibition of Contemporary British Sculpture, Amerada Hess Gallery, London, UK (1998)[4]
Drawing Itself, The London Institute Gallery, London, UK (1998)[4]
The Edward R. Broida Collection: A Selection of Works, Orlando Museum of Art, Orlando, Florida, USA (1998)[4]
At Home with Art, a national touring exhibition from the Hayward Gallery, London, UK (1999)[4]
Furniture, John Hansard Gallery, Southampton and Bluecoat Gallery, Liverpool, in association with Richard Salmon Gallery, London, UK (1999)[4]
Effervescence: La Sculpture ‘Anglaise’ dans les Collections Publiques Française de 1969 à 1989, Musée des Beaux-Arts d’Angers, Angers, France (2005)[4]
How to Improve the World: 60 Years of British Art in the Arts Council Collection, Hayward Gallery, London, UK (2006)[4]
Drawing Inspiration, Abbot Hall Gallery, Kendal, UK (2006)[4]
Paris: 16 Artists/ 32 Drawings, The Drawing Gallery, Watford, UK (2006)[4]
Sculpture at McLaren, The McLaren Technology Centre, London, UK (2007)[4]
Rummage: Sculptors' Drawings, The Winchester Gallery, Winchester School of Art, UK (2007)[4]
Seventeen at the Wharf Road Project, Seventeen, London (2008)[11]
Between Metaphor and Object: Art of the 90s from the IMMA Collection, Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin, CORE- Berthot, Bess, Fratteggiani Bianchi, Frecon, Lees, Therrien, Wilding, Wilmarth, Betty Cunningham Gallery, Chelsea, New York (2009)[11]
Multiple Store, Westbrook Gallery, London, UK (2009)[4]
The Black Page, Shandy Hall Gallery, Coxwold, UK (2009)[4]
Drawing Biennial 2009, Drawing Room, London, UK (2009)[4]
North House Gallery 10th Anniversary Show Part 1 and Part 2: Mainly Sky, North House Gallery, Manningtree, UK (2009)[4]
Super Farmer's Market, Handel Street Projects, London, UK (2010)[4]
Tony Carter: By Bread Only(1978-9), Henry Moore Institute, Leeds, UK (2018)[11]
The Sculpture Collections, Henry Moore Institute, Leeds, UK (2018)[11]
Women of the Royal Academy RA250, Abbot Hall Gallery, Kendal, UK (2018)[11]
Carl Plackman and His Circle, Pangolin London, Islington, London, UK (2019)[11]
Drawing Biennial 2019, Drawing Room, London, UK (2019)[11]
What Isn't Here Can't Hurt You, Royal British Society of Sculptors, South Kensington, London, UK (2019)[11]
From the Kitchen Table: Draw Gallery Projects1984-90, CGP London, UK (2019)[11]
Dialectical Materialism: Aspects of British Sculpture since the 1960s, Karsten Schubert, London, UK (2019)[4]
Can You Hear My Silent Scream?, Betty Cunningham Gallery, Lower East Side, New York (2020)[11]
The Other Side of The Coin, New Art Centre, Salisbury, UK (2020)[11]
Women's Lockdown Art, Zabludowicz Collection, London, UK (2020)[11]
We are Here, Heong Gallery, Cambridge, UK (2020)[4]
Nominations, awards, selection committees, and commissions
Public drinking fountain, Rathbone Square, commissioned by Great Portland Estate[4]
National Memorial to British Victims of Terrorism Overseas, commissioned by Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, National Memorial Aboretum, Staffordshire, 2018[4]
Instillation of Shimmy, commissioned by The Crown Estate and Exemplar, 10 New Burlington Street, London, 2014[4]
Alison Wilding [2018], the first critical survey of Wilding's work, published by Lund Humphries and edited by Jo Applin and Briony Fer. [12]
Alison Wilding: Art School Drawings from the 1960s and 70s [2011], published by Ridinghouse to coincide with her exhibition of the same title at Karsten Schubert, London (9 June – 29 July 2011). Karsten Schubert is the artist's main agent.[13]
Alison Wilding: Tracking [2008], featuring essays by Judy Collins, Sam Porritt and Rod Mengham. Published by Ridinghouse.[14]
References
"Alison Wilding". Royal Academy of Arts. Retrieved 26 February 2021.
Другой контент может иметь иную лицензию. Перед использованием материалов сайта WikiSort.org внимательно изучите правила лицензирования конкретных элементов наполнения сайта.
2019-2025 WikiSort.org - проект по пересортировке и дополнению контента Википедии