Barbara Hepworth: Art and Life
By Eleanor Clayton
Thames & Hudson/288
pages/$39.95
Reviewed by Ed Voves
Barbara Hepworth was born on
January 10, 1903. Britain's Edwardian Age, with its great affluence, class divisions and growing concern about the threat of war in Europe, was in full
flower. It was also the year when the Wright Brothers took to the air in their
flying machine. It was a momentous year to be born.
Hepworth, one of the greatest
sculptors of the modern age, is currently being celebrated by a major exhibition
in her home town, Wakefield, Yorkshire, and in a splendid biography by Eleanor
Clayton.
Barbara Hepworth: Art and
Life, exhibition and book, could
not be better timed. Hepworth's career calls for a reappraisal. She was such an
accomplished artist and - during the last years of her life - a very successful
one that she became something of an "establishment" figure.
Respectfully placed in a niche of honor, Hepworth has in recent years been
taken for granted, a victim of her own achievements.
The story of Hepworth's life
and art deserves better and Clayton's biography restores her as a dynamic
presence in modern art. I am sure the same can be said for the Hepworth
Wakefield exhibition, judging by the photos I have seen of this impressive
survey of Hepworth's oeuvre.
As briefly stated in
Clayton's introduction, Hepworth delineated three basic, primal
"forms" with which she created her sculptures.
Firstly, Hepworth utilized
the single vertical form representing "the human figure standing in
landscape." Second, she positioned two forms next to each other which evoke
"the tender relationship of one entity to another." Last in her
repertoire was the "closed form" which could be oval, spherical or
"pierced"- with at least part of the center area being carved to
provide empty space. The closed form, for Hepworth, represented "the
feeling or the embrace of living things."
Thus defined, Hepworth's procedures are reduced to essential precepts. But that does not mean that there was anything simplistic about her art. These "forms" served as the structural elements for configurations of astonishing variety and integration.
The intelligence and versatility which Hepworth devoted to her sculptures is evident in Three Forms (1935), where even the shadows cast by the egg-like objects are used to create a powerful sense of presence, and in her starkly-moving model for a monument to the anti-Fascist forces fighting in the Spanish Civil War.
As the Hepworths, father and
daughter, traveled along in these rural "rides," the young Barbara
caught sight of rocky outcrops, some of monumental size. Such
"crags" thrusting from the rolling surface of the Yorkshire moors had
inspired the epic novels of the Brontë sisters, only a few decades earlier.
Hepworth's artistic talent
and her parents' enlightened attitude to female education enabled her to kindle
the creative spark from these early journeys.
Clayton relates how the precocious Hepworth benefited from a steady
infusion of guidance, encouragement and support as she progressed through the
levels of British art education. Hepworth's dedication to her craft was duly
rewarded in 1921 when she was accepted into the Royal Academy of Art.
As this
beautifully-illustrated biography reveals, Hepworth was accomplished in drawing
and watercolor by her late teens. However, she chose sculpture as her primary
artistic medium. Working in stone and wood, (often rare hardwoods which are a
challenge to even veteran sculptors), Hepworth quickly demonstrated a level of
mastery rivaling that of her fellow Yorkshireman (and close friend), Henry
Moore.
From very early in her
career, Hepworth was drawn to avant garde circles in Britain, notably the Unit
One group, founded in 1933. The name was unintentionally ironic, as only one
exhibition was mounted by the short-lived band of modernists.
To be fair to the young
artists involved, their joint exhibit did travel around Britain, after showing
in London. Yet, it was the companion book to the exhibition which insured that
Unit One would be heard and remembered. Each of the contributing painters and
sculptors was responsible for an artist's statement. Hepworth rose to the
challenge. Her essay revealed impressive writing ability which brilliantly
explained her work ethic, practical and visionary in equal measure:
Carving is interrelated
masses conveying an emotion; a perfect relationship between the mind and the
colour, light and weight which is the stone, made by the hand which feels. It
must be so essentially sculpture that it can exist in no other way, something
completely the right size but which has growth, something still and yet having
movement, so very quiet and yet with a real vitality.
By the time that Hepworth
submitted her Unit One essay, she had moved from evoking the human figure in
almost spiritual manifestations to experiments in Abstraction. These might be
sculpted "biomorphic" forms or
carved oval 'hemispheres" pierced with glaring, eye-like holes with
which Hepworth affirmed that vision "is the perception of the mind."
If body and soul kept
emerging from Hepworth's sculptures, regardless of their forms and shapes, so
too did the natural world assert itself in her work. The landscape and the sea
made their presence felt, especially after Hepworth relocated to St. Ives in
Cornwall with her children to escape the bombing of London during World War II.
As noted, Hepworth was skillful in articulating her views on art. It might, therefore, be expected that she would also write essays rebelling against the male "patriarchy" of art officialdom and press reviewers. She certainly resented the patronizing comments about the "little woman who sculpts" which appeared in art reviews, especially in the early, prewar years. Yet, Hepworth responded with quite determination by producing an astonishing body of work, rather than polemical tracts.
In this outstanding biography, Eleanor Clayton balences her
commentary on Hepworth's art with telling insight into her private life.
Hepworth was married twice, to artists John Skeaping and Ben Nicolson. Both
marriages ended in divorce but she remained on good terms with both Skeaping
and Nicolson. And through years of war and rationing, she managed to raise four
children, a son by Skeaping and a set of triplets by Nicolson.
One of the triplets, Sarah,
was frequently ill during her childhood, with Hepworth spending much time in
doctor's offices and hospitals. By 1947, her own health began to break down
under the relentless strain and the onset of rhematism, an
"occupational" bane of sculptors. In a remarkable "gift" of
adversity, Hepworth was offered the opportunity to observe an operation by her
daughter's surgeon.
The result was a series of stunning sketches and paintings of medical procedures, executed in 1947-1948. Apart from the fact that Hepworth was able to continue working while recuperating from her own ailments, she was able to represent the ideals of her primal, sculptural forms in linear fashion.
Whether creating an Abstract
sculpture or recording the intense focus of a surgeon's eyes, Hepworth embraced
both carefully-defined form and a sense of the infinite potential of human
beings. Clayton certainly does justice to Hepworth's artistic ability and the
spiritual, humane values which underpinned Hepworth's life and work.
That being said, there is a
difficulty in making a detailed appraisal of Hepworth's actual works of art,
especially for American art lovers. The overwhelming majority of Hepworth's
creative output is housed in British museums, chiefly Hepworth Wakefield and
her studio at St. Ives, now part of the Tate Museum network. Also,
international exhibitions of sculpture are much more difficult to mount than
those devoted to paintings and works on paper.
Some of the major U.S.
museums do have works by Hepworth in their collections, though rarely
displaying more than one or two at the same time. As I read Clayton's superb
biography, I was fortunate in being able to visit the Rodin Museum in
Philadelphia, which is affiliated with the Philadelphia Museum of Art.
Currently on view at the Rodin is Hepworth's 1956 bronze entitled Involute.
Hepworth, of course, need studio
assistants to created such works. but once again, she made a virtue of
necessity. This enabled her to "go big" with casts of her work,
notably the memorial to Dag Hammerskjold, the Secretary General of the United
Nations who was killed in a plane crash while trying to restore peace during
the Congo civil strife in 1962.
Hammerskjold had been close
friend of Hepworth's and his death was a shocking blow. This was in no small
part because it compounded the terrible effect of the 1953 death of Hepworth's son,
Paul Skeaping, killed in an air accident while serving in the Royal Air Force.
And little could she know that her life would end in a tragic accident, a
studio fire in 1975.
Hepworth's monumental
tribute to Hammerskjold has been on display in front of the United Nations
headquarters in New York since its unveiling in 1964. Seeing Hepworth
"dwarfed" next to the plaster prototype for the bronze cast of Single
Form (Memorial) is unsettling. She
herself was dubious about the size, especially as Hammerskjold, a deeply
sensitive man had rejected "all that might veer towards the grandiose and
pompous."
Never-the-less, Single
Form (Memorial) is a moving and appropriate work of art. You have to arch
you back a bit to focus on the entire expanse of the bronze surface. The
irregular, "biomorphic" form with its circular opening, its eye,
gives it a human feeling, with a touch of god's grandeur.
Single Form (Memorial) drew inspiration from each of the primal forms which Hepworth
used throughout her long, productive career. The first, "the human figure
standing in landscape" and the third, the "closed form" pierced
by an opening in the surface, are obvious.
The second form is
particularly important, though it may take sometime to grasp. There are in
fact two forms here, two beings, two "entities" in a tender
relationship. Who are they? It is the viewer beholding the mighty work and the
spirit of the great artist who created it, resonating from within.
The same sense of communion
is very much a part of the reading experience of Barbara Hepworth: Art and
Life. Eleanor Clayton has summoned Hepworth back to life - and her
presence lingers like the sensation of "the embrace of living
things."
***
Text: Copyright of Ed Voves, all rights reserved.
Barbara
Hepworth: Art & Life is published to
accompany a major exhibition at The Hepworth Wakefield from May 21, 2021
through February 27, 2022.
Book cover image
Courtesy of Thames & Hudson
Introductory
Image: Barbara Hepworth with The Cosdon Head, 1949 The Hepworth
Photograph Collection Courtesy Bowness Photograph: Hans Wild
Installation image of Barbara Hepworth: Art & Life at The Hepworth Wakefield, 2021. Photograph by Lewis Ronald Plastiques
Barbara Hepworth (center) studying on a Yorkshire Senior County Art Scholarship, with fellow students at the Royal College of Art, London, c. 1921–23 The Hepworth Photograph Collection Courtesy Bowness
Barbara
Hepworth’s sculpture record for Three Forms (1935) Gift to The Hepworth
Wakefield from the Hepworth Estate, 2013 Photograph: Barbara Hepworth ©
Bowness
Barbara
Hepworth, Project – Monument to the Spanish War (1938–39) Photograph:
Barbara Hepworth © Bowness
Barbara Hepworth, Tibia Graft (1949) Wakefield Permanent Art Collection Purchased by Wakefield Corporation, 1951) © Bowness Photograph: Jerry Hardman-Jones
Anne Lloyd, Photo (20200 Barbara Hepworth's Involute (1956) at the Rodin Museum, Philadelphia.
Barbara Hepworth
with the plaster Single Form at the Morris Singer Foundry, May 1963 The
Hepworth Photograph Collection Courtesy Bowness Photograph: Morgan Wells
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