If you are interested in following or contributing to this journey please contact the gallery.The collection of one of Britain’s most iconic female sculptors is being sold at auction in Salisbury, after 25 years of lying undiscovered in a barn. Her artistic context will reside within the studio whatever its future shape. Within this rural landscape she honed her working practice and drew more deeply upon ideas regarding human actions, as well as the dignity of other species. Elisabeth Frink was drawn to this region as a place to focus on her humanitarian concerns which she expressed through her art. Ultimately we hope that the building will find a permanent home in the South West and enable future generations of artists to find their own inspiration.
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To date this has included the performative dance of Anthony Matsena and poetry of Gommie. Our vision is to inspire other creative minds, nurture established and new ways of working, and develop a legacy of work that embraces different cultures and cultural practices. The building will continue to tell this story but will also evolve. We are grateful to all those who have loaned objects and expertise to illustrate her working methods. It has been brought back to life and reimagined to help us better understand her artistic practice, using plaster and other materials, to create sculptures that were generally cast in bronze.
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The exhibition has been made possible with the assistance, support and loans from Dorset History Centre, Yorkshire Sculpture Park, Annette Ratuszniak as well as private collectors, Frink’s family and the Messums Wiltshire friends programme.Įlisabeth Frink’s blue door studio was once at the heart of her creative process. During the decade of 1982-1992 she was awarded a DBE, had a solo exhibition at the Royal Academy and was awarded a Companion of Honour. In 1969 Frink was awarded a CBE and in 1971 she was elected an Associate of the Royal Academy. Their poignancy, strength, mastery and beauty are revealed through the images that Ian made over those two years.īorn in 1930, Frink is amongst the most notable sculptors of the last century whose works continue to be widely exhibited in public and private collections throughout the world. Some were damaged, some mere fragments, but the sculptures bear the marks of Frink’s hands and express humanitarian feelings and concerns.
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Our Performance Associate Anthony Matsena will present a new performance in response to Frink’s work on 5 September and from 12 September, the building will be filled with architectural models on the theme ‘Living within’ – an architectural consideration of space from the point of view of creativity.Ī Place Apart includes a remarkable body of photographs by Ian Chapman: White Out of Darkdocuments the process of uncovering more than 80 original plasters that had been removed from her studio and we discovered storage between 2017 – 2019. Running throughout the exhibition is a programme of talks, panel discussions and performance, as well as an architectural installation that gravitates around the concept of ‘creative spaces’.
![elisabeth frink elisabeth frink](https://www.betweenthecovers.com/pictures/378380.jpg)
As well as providing insight into her creative process, it will form a backdrop to a programme of events exploring creative environments. Partnering with renowned architects Stiff + Trevillion, the studio has been revived as an exhibition space displaying works from Frink’s studio and elements of her working practice and environment. The studio, which Messums rescued from collapse in 2019, has been reconstructed to display a collection of original plasters alongside tools and objects salvaged from Woolland, providing a never seen before insight into one of Britain’s foremost sculptors.Įlisabeth Frink lived and worked at Woolland, Dorset from 1977 up until her death aged 63 in 1993, and her studio there bore witness to over a decade of prolific drawing and sculpting. The working world of Elisabeth Frink has arrived at Messums Wiltshire with the resurrection of her Woolland studio in our historic tithe barn. Entry by annual or single entry membership, more info