Anish Kapoor
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Anish Kapoor's sculptures may be hewn from blocks of stone or made of polished steel, yet he can make shallow depressions look like bottomless pits, and holes look like solid surfaces. In 1992, when he exhibited Descent into Limbo (1992)[1]at Documenta in Kassel, audiences were confronted by a deep black hole that looked like a circle of carpet. The power of Kapoor's sculptures lies in our uncer¬tainty as to the boundaries between air and mat¬ter, solid and void, tapping into a primal fear of the unknown.
Kapoor's use of pigment in his early sculptures distorts the contours of the shapes he is creating. From deep crimson to cobalt blue, his intense and velvety colours appear to suck up the light around them. Kapoor first began using pow¬dered pigment in his sculptures in 1979, a clear reference to the ritual performances of the Holi Festival in his native India. The earliest exam¬ples consisted of formal groupings of chalk and colour. By the time he made The Chant of Blue, in 1983, Kapoor was layering the pigment onto polystyrene or fibreglass shapes that looked like strange mineral or plant forms. They were oth¬erworldly, like meteorites or specimens brought back from some distant world, and so alien that they seemed symbolic of a great mystery. Kapoor has said that artists don't make objects, they make mythologies, and that when we look at a work of art we are seeing the mythological context in which the artist is working.[2] Kapoor's context includes great Minimalist sculptors such as Donald Judd and Carl Andre, whom he discovered while studying at Hornsey College of Art and Chelsea School of Art in the 1970s. What had excited him, and what endures in his sculp¬tures, is the Minimalist concept that an object has a language of its own, unconstrained by the history of the maker or the viewer's interpreta¬tion. The result is a form that appears to contain the secrets of the universe.
JL
[1]. Collection of Du Pont Museum of Contemporary Art, Tilburg.
[2]. Kapoor in interview with John Tusa for BBC Radio 3. www.bbc.co.uk/radio3/johntusainterview/kapoor_transcript.shtml accessed February 2009.
Published in Passports British Council Collection, British Council, London 2009
- Accession Number P4362
- Dimensions 3: 61 X 61 X 61/76 X
- Media POLYSTYRENE, RESIN, GESSO AND PIGMENT IN 4 PARTS
Glossary (2)
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Contemporary
Existing or coming into being at the same period; of today or of the present. The term that designates art being made today.
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Fibreglass
A light and durable material made from glass filaments embedded in plastic that can be moulded, stained or painted.
Past exhibitions
THIRD DIMENSION SCULPTURE FROM THE BRITISH COUNCIL COLLECTION
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2012
- UK, Canterbury, Sidney Cooper Gallery
THE THIRD DIMENSION - MUNSTERLAND FESTIVAL 2011
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2011
- Germany, Emsdetten, GALERIE MUNSTERLAND
THE FUTURE DEMANDS YOUR PARTICIPATION
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2010
- China, Shanghai, Minsheng Art Gallery
PASSPORTS. IN VIAGGIO CON L'ARTE
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2009
- Italy, Milan, Padglione D'arte Contemporanea
PASSPORTS: GREAT EARLY BUYS FROM THE BRITISH COUNCIL COLLECTION
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2009
- UK, London, Whitechapel Art Gallery
FORM
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2004
- Ireland, Letterkenny Arts Centre
TURNING POINTS 20TH CENTURY BRITISH SCULPTURE
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2004
- Iran, Tehran, Museum Of Contemporary Art
FIELD DAY SCULPTURE FROM BRITAIN
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2001
- Taiwan, Taipei, Taipei Fine Arts Museum
A CHANGED WORLD
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2000
- Malta, Valletta, St James Cavalier Centre For Creativity
- Cyprus, Nicosia, Nicosia Municipal Arts Centre
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1999
- Zimbabwe, Harare, National Gallery Of Zimbabwe
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1998
- Zimbabwe, Bulawayo, National Gallery Of Zimbabwe In Bulawayo
- South Africa, Cape Town, South African National Gallery
- South Africa, Johannesburg, Johannesburg Art Gallery
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1997
- Pakistan, Lahore, The Old Fort
- Pakistan, Karachi, Hindu Gymkhana
A CHANGING WORLD 50 YEARS OF SCULPTURE FROM THE BRITISH COUNCIL COLLECTION
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1996
- Germany, Essen, Folkwang Museum
- Morocco, Casablanca, Espace Wafabank
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1995
- Czech Republic, Prague, Riding Hall, Prague Castle
- Russia, Moscow, New Tretyakov Museum
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1994
- Russia, St Petersburg, The Russian Museum
NEW VOICES
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1997
- Macedonia, Skopje, Museum Of Modern Art
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1996
- Czech Republic, Prague, Czech Musuem Of Fine Arts, The House Of The Black Madonna
- Greece, Thessaloniki, Cultural Centre For The National Bank
- Slovakia, Bratislava, Mirbachov Palace
- Russia, Nizhny Novgorod, Kremlin Museum
- Russia, St Petersburg, The Russian Museum
- Greece, Thessaloniki, Cultural Centre For The National Bank
- Greece, Athens, Art Halls Of The Cultural Centre Of The Municipality Of Athens
- Romania, Bucharest, National Theatre Galleries
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1995
- Germany, Magdeburg, Kulturhistorisches Museum
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1994
- Spain, Jerez, Sala Pescaderia Vieja, Ayunamiento De Jerez
- Spain, Murcia, Veronicas Sala De Exposiciones
- Spain, Madrid, Centro Cultural Galileo
- Spain, Bilbao, Museo De Bellas Artes De Bilbao
- Spain, Barcelona, Centre De Art Santa Monica
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1993
- Turkey, Izmir, Izfas Gallery
- Turkey, Ankara, State Fine Arts Gallery
- Turkey, Istanbul, Istanbul Greater City Municipality Taksim Art Gallery
- Belgium, Luxembourg, Musee National D'histoire Et D'art
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1992
- Belgium, Brussels, EEC Presidency Exhibition
- Belgium, Brussels, La Borschette
FOR A WIDER WORLD
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1991
- Argentina, Buenos Aires, Museo Nacional De Bellas Artes
- Bulgaria, Sofia, Cyril Methodius Foundation
- Belgium, Luxembourg, Musee National D'histoire Et D'art
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1990
- Ussr, Kiev, Ukrainian Museum Of Fine Art
1983 SAO PAULO BIENAL - TRANSFORMATIONS
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1984
- Portugal, Lisbon, Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation
- Mexico, Mexico City, Museo De Arte Moderno
- Brazil, Rio De Janeiro, Museu De Arte Moderna
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1983
- Brazil, Sao Paulo, Sao Paulo Bienal