Antony Gormley (born 1950) is an English sculptor, best known as the creator of Angel of the North, a public sculpture in Gateshead.
Gormley studied at Ampleforth College. He also studied at Trinity College, Cambridge from 1968 to 1971 before going to India and Sri Lanka to study Buddhism from 1971 to 1974. From 1974 onwards, he attended various colleges in London, completing his studies with a postgraduate course in sculpture at the Slade School of Art, University College London between 1977 and 1979. His career was given early support by Nicholas Serota who gave him a solo exhibition at the Whitechapel Art Gallery.
Almost all of his work takes the human body as its subject, with his own body used in many works as the basis for metal casts.
Gormley's work is, in the words of the artist, "an attempt to materialise the place at the other side of appearance where we all live" many of his works are based on moulds taken from his own body " the closest experience of matter that I will ever have and the only part of the material world that I live inside" His work attempts to treat the body not as a thing but a place and in making works that enclose the space of a particular body to identify a condition common to all human beings. The work is not symbolic but indexical - a trace of a real event of a real body in time.
Gormley won the Turner Prize in 1994 with Field for the British Isles. He is currently a trustee of the Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art.
The 2006 Sydney Biennale featured Gormley's Asian Field, an installation of 180,000 small clay figurines crafted by 350 Chinese villagers in five days from 100 tons of red clay.
1950 births | Living people | English sculptors | Contemporary sculptors | Alumni of Trinity College, Cambridge | UCL alumni | Turner Prize winners
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