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Sculpting Lives: Barbara Hepworth

Sculpting Lives: Barbara Hepworth

Released Tuesday, 24th March 2020
Good episode? Give it some love!
Sculpting Lives: Barbara Hepworth

Sculpting Lives: Barbara Hepworth

Sculpting Lives: Barbara Hepworth

Sculpting Lives: Barbara Hepworth

Tuesday, 24th March 2020
Good episode? Give it some love!
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“Hepworth... didn’t see herself as a feminist at all and didn’t see herself as ‘a pioneering woman’, she just felt she was a pioneering sculptor.” Stephen Feeke, curator and writer. 

Barbara Hepworth was born in Wakefield, West Yorkshire, in 1903. By the time of her death in 1975, she had become one of the most important artists of the century, creating a poignant and innovative sculptural language. She is extremely unusual for a woman artist in that she has two museums named after her. 

Although a lot has been written about Hepworth, there is still a great deal to find out – there is a mystique and there are assumptions made about her. In this episode, we challenge those ideas, go to the places she lived and worked, and explore why she remains such a powerful influence on artists today. “A normal person from Wakefield, a remarkable artist but a remarkable woman.” Eleanor Clayton, Curator, The Hepworth Wakefield. 

With AMAZING contributions from:

·      Eleanor Clayton, Curator, The Hepworth Wakefield·      Sara Matson, Curator, Tate St Ives·      Stephen Feeke, Curator and Writer
·      Clare Lilley, Director of Programme, Yorkshire Sculpture Park

In the episode, we visit these incredible places associated with Hepworth's career and legacy:
The Hepworth, Wakefield
Barbara Hepworth Museum and Sculpture Garden (Tate), St Ives
Yorkshire Sculpture Park

For the art works discussed in this episode and more images related to our research on Hepworth, visit @sculptinglives on Instagram

Image: Dame Barbara Hepworth, Corymb, 1959, bronze, 33.7 x 34.5 x 25.6 cm. Collection Barbara Hepworth Museum and Sculpture Garden, Tate St Ives (T12281). © Bowness

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From The Podcast

Sculpting Lives

Sculpting Lives is a podcast series written and presented by Jo Baring (https://www.jobaring.com/about) (Director of the Ingram Collection of Modern British & Contemporary Art) and Sarah Victoria Turner (https://www.paul-mellon-centre.ac.uk/about/people/sarah-victoria-turner) (Deputy Director at the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art in London).Dame Barbara Hepworth, Dame Elisabeth Frink, Kim Lim, Phyllida Barlow and Rana Begum – some of the most globally well-known British artists are women sculptors. Conversely, the profession and practice of sculpture was seen by many throughout the twentieth century (and before) to be very much a man’s world. Often using heavy and hard materials, sculpture was not typically viewed as suitable for women artists. Series one explores the lives and careers of these five women who worked (and are still working) against these preconceptions, forging successful careers and contributing in groundbreaking ways to the histories of sculpture and art. Series two features episodes on Dora Gordine, Gertrude Hermes, Veronica Ryan, Alison Wilding and Cathie Pilkington. At a moment when public sculpture is the subject of contentious debate, the final episode of the second series focuses on questions of gender, public sculpture and display, and explores women’s representation – both as subjects and artists – in our public spaces and exhibitions.Each episode is recorded in places that are significant for the women sculptors featured – their studios, as well as galleries and public places where their work is on display – and includes new interviews with curators, friends, family and the artists themselves, creating intimate soundscapes of their private and public worlds.The @SculptingLives Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/sculptinglives) feed contains more information about the podcast and the artists and artworks featured in it.Written and hosted by: Jo Baring and Sarah TurnerProduced by: Clare LynchResearch by: Isabelle Mooney (Series One) & Chloe Nahum (Series Two)Music by: Pauline Oliveros, [Silence] (https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Pauline_Oliveros/EASY_NOT_EASY_Festival_Oct_8_2010/Silence_1082010)Visual identity by: Vanessa Fowler-KendallThis podcast has been made possible through support from the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art.We are also extremely grateful to Art UK (https://artuk.org/) and National Life Stories: Artists' Lives (British Library) (https://www.bl.uk/projects/national-life-stories-artists-lives) .

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