
Antony Gormley - Witness II, 1993
‘I have always thought of the darkness of the body as being equivalent to the darkness of the universe.’ - Antony Gormley.
Antony Gormley's sculpted figures have become so ubiquitous, and pieces such as The Angel of The North 1998, are recognised globally and held in much affection by the public. Gormley was feted with a large retrospective of his career to date at the Royal Academy of Art in 2019 (here), but this current show goes back to the beginnings of Gormley's career and is made up exclusively of pieces from that period of the 1970s and 80s. We see how Gormley used both found objects and then his own body in his sculpture, and the material of lead to embody a sense of vulnerability, space and presence. In the piece titled Natural Selection 24 lead-encased objects – 12 natural, 12 human-made – are arranged along the gallery floor in descending scale, from the largest, a sphere, to the smallest, a pea-sized form. At the midpoint of this scale meet two near-identical shapes – a goose egg and a grenade – compares similarities in the natural and man-made. Other pieces such as Land Sea and Air I, see lead used to create three rock-like structures. The first wraps and encloses an actual granite rock found on a visit to Ireland's west coast, whilst the second holds water, and the last of the trio of leaden rock forms contains air. The elements are transformed becoming hidden from the viewer transposing them 'from substance to imagination: from matter to mind' as Gormley states. Another transformation occurs when the artist takes 45mm lead handgun bullets which are piled on the floor resembling a mound of grain ready to be planted. Easily the most recognisable of the early works here though are the ones in which Gormley allowed his own body having struck a series of poses to be cast in lead. Descending the stairs to the lower gallery and encountering Gormley's Close I figure, provokes a shock response as it is spread-eagled on the floor in front of you and appears so vulnerable and prone. Your mind can't help but strike up narratives as to why this figure has come to be in this position. Was the figure caught in a criminal act and then been ordered to assume the position by security or police? Was it involved in an accident perhaps, or been the victim of something darker like foul play? The piece asks so many questions. Witness II appears completely self-absorbed, brooding and emotionally unavailable, closed to the world, yet determinedly holding and occupying space. Untitled (Listening Figure) similarly occupies space though with a cupped hand to an ear engaged in the act of listening. Gormley took his inspiration for this sculpture from the 11th-century Tibetan siddha Milarepa, who would ‘listen for the echo of his own voice rebounding across mountain valleys from his Himalayan cave in Nyalam’. Strangest of these figurative sculptures is Home and the World II, a striding figure with an elongated girder-like structure in the form of a house for a head. It speaks of the basic human need for a base and shelter and yet man's yearning for travel and the need for exploration. The exhibition concludes with a selection of Gormley's always fascinating drawings. This aspect of his practice appears to be a vital to him as an artist, and the results are always fascinating regardless of whatever medium they are executed in. These early figures are iconic and those which sealed Gormley's reputation, and those from which he would go on to push the envelope further, starkly reducing the figure to a series of blocks or lines, but never giving way completely to abstraction. The sculptures are always recognisable as the human form in one way or another, and always examining the human condition.
Land Sea and Air I (1977–79)
Natural Selection, 1981
Seeds II, 1989/93
Shield II (1978)
Mask (1978)
Close I, 1992
Untitled (Sleeping Figure), 1983
Home and the World II, 1986-96
Witness II, 1993
Blanket Drawing I (1983)
Untitled (Listening Figure), 1983
Ransom II, 1986
As Above So Below I, 1986
Antony Gormley: WITNESS - Early Lead Works
until 8th June
White Cube Mason's Yard
25-26 Mason's Yard
London
SW1Y