ART CITIES:Zurich-Phyllida Barlow
For more than 50 years, Phyllida Barlow has taken inspiration from her surroundings to create imposing installations that can be at once menacing and playful. She creates anti-monumental sculptures from inexpensive, low-grade materials such as cardboard, fabric, plywood, polystyrene, scrim and cement. These constructions are often painted in industrial or vibrant colors, the seams of their construction left at times visible, revealing the means of their making.
By Dimitris Lempesis
Photo: Hauser & Wirth Archive
Phyllida Barlow’s solo exhibigtion “small worlds” features new sculptures, drawings and wall-works made by the artist during and inspired by the 2020 lockdown in London. Barlow is known for transforming humble, readily available materials through layering, accumulation, and juxtaposition, often drawing inspiration from her urban surroundings and referencing construction debris, architectural details, signs, and discarded objects. The works on view encourage an intimate encounter between object and viewer, continuing a career-long exploration into the ways in which sculpture can dissolve boundaries between realms of experience. The artist’s new sculptures in Zurich continue a shift away from the more immersive environments within her practice. Created in her home studio in London, these smaller sculptures, placed on steel plinths or directly onto the wall, invite the viewer to consider the works on an individual and more intimate basis. Working on a smaller scale during this period has also allowed the artist to return to a more direct means of making. Varying in size, texture, materials, color and shape, the lockdown sculptures have been transformed from offcuts of previous works, using their raw materiality and structural elements as a starting point for creation. Some of the works in the exhibition were inspired by the transformed landscape of London during the nationwide lockdown others by dreamscapes or previous works. Through the individual positioning of these sculptures, Barlow continues to emphasise the transient, absurd, and often joyous encounter between an object and its surroundings. The exhibition also presents a suite of new drawings made in 2020. Drawing is an integral part of Barlow’s practice; she draws before, during and after creating sculptures, both as a means of developing a working process and to visualize ideas which are later translated into three dimensions. Drawing provides Barlow with the freedom to improvise and engage directly with materials. The resulting works are fluid and dynamic. She works across media, using pencil, acrylic and watercolor, always with the intense physicality evident in her sculptural work. The drawings in the presentation are reminiscent of stages or cityscapes. Here, the paper becomes a space for adventure as Barlow creates unlikely compositions within her drawings which are freed from the laws of physics.
Photo: Phyllida Barlow, untitled: ceremonial monument; 2020, 2020, Acrylic on watercolour paper, 31 x 40.9 cm / 12 1/4 x 16 1/8 in, © Phyllida Barlow, Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth Gallery
Info: Hauser & Wirth Gallery, Limmatstrasse 270, Zürich, Duration: 22/1-24/5/2021, Days & Hours: Tue-Fri 11:00-18:00, Sat 11:00-17:00 (In accordance with recent government guidance, the gallery is temporarily closed until 28 February), www.hauserwirth.com