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William Turnbull is one of the most influential modern British sculptors. From June to December you will be able to see a concise survey of his art in the magnificent space of Tate Britain’s Duveen Galleries. The work on display range from examples of Turnbull’s earliest works, made in Paris shortly after the war, to some of his most recent. Turnbull has worked in a variety of materials, including plaster, bronze, wood, steel and plastic. One of his most abiding concerns is with the totemic and many sculptures show his fascination in the cultures of ancient Greece, West Africa and South-East Asia. His work can also be playful, however, brightly coloured or even interactive. Everything he makes has an aesthetic and intellectual elegance and involves the exploration of the fundamentals of sculpture itself.
The earliest works shown here, made in Paris in the late 1940s, reflect Turnbull’s
contact with artist Alberto Giacometti and his fascination with
Existentialist philosophy. The sculptures from this period experiment with
ideas of variability, games and they sometimes possess a sense of the
ridiculous. Turnbull’s interest in the different ways of experiencing the
world was influenced by his activity as a pilot and swimmer.
Later, Turnbull felt his linear sculptures were too theoretical. Beginning
with a series of
Masks 1953, he developed work concerned primarily with
surface. He pushed found objects into clay moulds so that there was an
element of chance in the final image. Randomness is an abiding
characteristic of Turnbull’s sculpture and can be seen in works like
Spring
Totem 1962-3, in which different elements are arranged in a variety of ways.