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Shaping the world : sculpture from prehistory to now / Antony Gormley & Martin Gayford.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: London ; New York : Thames & Hudson, 2020Copyright date: ©2020Description: 391 pages : illustrations (chiefly color) ; 29 cmContent type:
  • text
  • still image
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9780500022672
  • 0500022674
Subject(s): Genre/Form: DDC classification:
  • 730.9 23
LOC classification:
  • NB60 .GOR 2020
Contents:
Bodies in space -- Off the wall -- Mounds, fields & standing stones -- Trees & life -- Light & darkness -- Clay & modelling -- Voids -- The body & the block -- The age of bronze -- Bodies & buildings -- The Colossus & the slave -- Time & mortality -- Drapery & anatomy -- Actions & events -- Fear & fetishism -- Collecting & selecting -- Industry & heavy metal -- Shaping a changing world.
Summary: Sculpture is the universal art. It has been practised by every culture throughout the world and stretches back into the distant past. The first surviving shaped stones may even predate the advent of language. The drive to form stone, clay, wood and metal into shapes evidently runs deep in our psyche and biology. This links the question 'What is sculpture?' to the question 'What is humanity?' In this wide-ranging book, two complementary voices - one belonging to an artist who looks to Asian and Buddhist traditions as much as to Western sculptural history, the other to a critic and historian - consider how sculpture has been central to the evolution of our potential for thinking and feeling. Sculpture cannot be seen in isolation as an aesthetic pursuit; it is related to humankind's compelling urge to make its mark on the landscape, build, make pictures, practise religion and develop philosophical thought. Drawing on examples from thousands of years BCE to now, and from around the globe, the authors treat sculpture as a transnational art form with its own compelling history. They take into account materials and techniques, and consider overarching themes such as space, light and darkness. Above all, they discuss their view of sculpture as a form of physical thinking capable of altering the way people feel and of inviting them to look at sculpture they encounter and more broadly the world around them in a completely different way.
Item type: Reference Material List(s) this item appears in: Reference
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
Reference Material Reference Material Edith Amarteifio Library Reference Reference NB60.GOR 2020 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Not For Loan 0000000269

Includes bibliographical references (pages 382-383) and index.

Bodies in space -- Off the wall -- Mounds, fields & standing stones -- Trees & life -- Light & darkness -- Clay & modelling -- Voids -- The body & the block -- The age of bronze -- Bodies & buildings -- The Colossus & the slave -- Time & mortality -- Drapery & anatomy -- Actions & events -- Fear & fetishism -- Collecting & selecting -- Industry & heavy metal -- Shaping a changing world.

Sculpture is the universal art. It has been practised by every culture throughout the world and stretches back into the distant past. The first surviving shaped stones may even predate the advent of language. The drive to form stone, clay, wood and metal into shapes evidently runs deep in our psyche and biology. This links the question 'What is sculpture?' to the question 'What is humanity?' In this wide-ranging book, two complementary voices - one belonging to an artist who looks to Asian and Buddhist traditions as much as to Western sculptural history, the other to a critic and historian - consider how sculpture has been central to the evolution of our potential for thinking and feeling. Sculpture cannot be seen in isolation as an aesthetic pursuit; it is related to humankind's compelling urge to make its mark on the landscape, build, make pictures, practise religion and develop philosophical thought. Drawing on examples from thousands of years BCE to now, and from around the globe, the authors treat sculpture as a transnational art form with its own compelling history. They take into account materials and techniques, and consider overarching themes such as space, light and darkness. Above all, they discuss their view of sculpture as a form of physical thinking capable of altering the way people feel and of inviting them to look at sculpture they encounter and more broadly the world around them in a completely different way.

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