Stephen Feeke

PhD student

Midlife Materiality: Barbara Hepworth and Bronze

 

Supervisor: Jo Applin

Advisor: David Peters Corbett

My study focuses on Barbara Hepworth and the transition she made from carving to casting, a brave decision made at a critical moment in her career. It will examine her initial reluctance towards bronze and the reasons why in 1956 – middle-aged and mid-career – she felt compelled to make such a fundamental change in her working practices, after thirty years dedicated to direct carving and the doctrine of ‘truth to materials’. I am fascinated by the impact this decision had on her, her work and on her reputation at the time, and also how it has shaped more recent assessments of her as a pioneering woman sculptor.

Hepworth declared that she finally learned to love bronze in 1966, in a letter to her then ex-husband. Until that point, her relationship with the material had often been fraught with complications. By 1964, however, her use of bronze reached an apotheosis with ‘Single Form’. Commissioned by the U.N. for its Secretariat, ‘Single Form’ was the most important commission of Hepworth’s career, but as a public, abstract sculpture by a British woman sculptor for a prominent site in New York, its impact should, I feel, be better understood. Framed by the latent (and blatant) misogyny of the period and great shifts in a quickly growing art world, I will examine the bronzes Hepworth produced between 1956 and 1964 culminating with ‘Single Form’. I shall give particular focus to the experimental nature of Hepworth’s new working methods before she found a satisfactory synthesis of form, scale and material, until, one might say, she found a ‘new’ truth to a ‘new’ material. Many of these works receive little or no critical attention now. Likewise, Hepworth’s drawings and paintings – which were key in the development of her own ‘bronze age’ – are a neglected area of study, and offer great scope for my project.

Over the course of a twenty-year career as a curator, I have been responsible for more than one hundred exhibitions; first at the Henry Moore Institute, Leeds and then at the New Art Centre, Roche Court. I recently left my role as a Director of the New Art Centre in order to pursue this Ph.D., having curated several exhibitions of Hepworth’s work there, including: Barbara Hepworth: a celebration of The Hepworth Wakefield (2011); and Barbara Hepworth: Form and Theatre (2015). The New Art Centre represents the Hepworth Estate, and I also helped place Hepworth’s sculpture and paintings in a number of private and public collections including ‘Single Form (Eikon)’ at The Metropolitan Museum, New York.

At the Courtauld, I organised the second year Modern and Contemporary symposium in 2021 and co-organised the third year postgraduate symposium in 2022.


Recent papers

  • Barbara Hepworth: Her Life and Art Through Her Letters, Museum Lehmbruck, Duisburg, Germany, 1 June 2023
  • Read, Hepworth and an Integrated Anima, Henry Moore Foundation / University of Leeds, 22 November 2022
  • Curves in Space: The Interplay between Hepworth’s Sculpture and Tachiste Painting, Stanley & Audrey Burton Gallery, University of Leeds, 18 March 2022
  • Hepworth and the Tache: drawings and paintings from 1957, Hepworth Research Network, The Hepworth Wakefield, 12 March 2020
  • Hepworth in the Public Realm, The Heong Gallery, Downing College, Cambridge, 25 January 2020
  • Barbara Hepworth: Learning to Love Bronze, McCrum Theatre, Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, 21 November 2019, in aid of Art Friends Cambridgeshire

Selected publications

  • Barbara Hepworth at the Rijksmuseum, Introduction to the exhibition and catalogue entries, 2022
  • ‘Hepworth, Soulages and the ‘Tachist Bug’, News (davidwadefineart.com)
  • ‘Hepworth and the Tache, Drawings and Paintings, 1957-58’, Online Papers, Hepworth Research Network: Papers | The Hepworth Wakefield
  • Interview with Ann-Marie James, Ann-Marie James: Alchemy, London: Ridinghouse, 2020
  • ‘Des Hughes: Opus Anglicanum’, I Want to be Adored, London: Art/Books, 2018.
  • ‘Anthony Caro and Sea Music’, Anthony Caro: Sea Music, London: Ridinghouse, 2017.
  • ‘Laura Ford and Strawberry Hill’, Laura Ford Sculpture, Salisbury: New Art Centre, 2015.
  • ‘Barbara Hepworth: Inside/Outside’, Barbara Hepworth: Within the Landscape, Kendal: Lakeland Arts Trust, 2014.
  • ‘Works and Days’, Nicholas Pope, London: Ridinghouse, 2013.
  • ‘Clare Woods: The Seven Eggs’, The Seven Eggs: Works by Clare Woods, Leeds: Harewood House, 2013.
  • ‘Mary Redmond’, Function/Dysfunction, Nuremburg: Neues Museum, 2013.
  • ‘Introduction’, Caro at Chatsworth, Chatsworth House, 2012.
  • ‘Aloof’, Michael Dean: Introduction to the Principles of Symmetrical Intimacy, Freiburg: Kunstverein Freiburg, 2011.
  • ‘The Art of Curating’, Claire Barclay: Causing Chaos, St Andrews: Fife Contemporary Art & Craft, 2010.
  • ‘Introduction’ (with Sophie Raikes), Undone: Making and Unmaking in Contemporary Art, Leeds: Henry Moore Institute, 2010.
  • ‘Anton Henning: ‘Blumenstilleben No, 286 (2005)’, Sculpture in Painting, Leeds: Henry Moore Institute, 2010.
  • Concrete and Poetry: drawings for an art museum by Lina Bo Bardi, Leeds: Henry Moore Institute, 2009.
  • ‘Introduction’ (with Claire Sawyer), Art in Public Places: The archive of the Public Art Development Trust, Leeds: Henry Moore Institute, 2009.
  • ‘The Comfort of Strangers’, Angela Detanico and Rafael Lain: Inversed Times, Paris: Musée Zadkine, 2007.
  • ‘Legacies of the Laocoon’, Towards a New Laocoon: Richard Deacon, Tony Cragg and Eduardo Paolozzi, Leeds: Henry Moore Institute, 2007
  • ‘Introduction’, Espaço Aberto / Espaço Fechado: Sites for sculpture in modern Brazil, Leeds: Henry Moore Institute, 2006.
  • ‘Catalogue of exhibits’(with Katherine Hunt), Depth of Field: the place of the relief in the time of Donatello, London: Victoria and Albert Museum; Leeds: Henry Moore Institute, 2005.
  • My Personal Museum: ‘Ego Geometria Sum’ from the Helen Chadwick Archive (with Victoria Worsley), Leeds: Henry Moore Institute, 2004.
  • ‘John Logie Baird and Stooky Bill: Ventriloquism in Early Television’, With Hidden Noise: Sculpture, Video and Ventriloquism, Leeds: Henry Moore Institute, 2004
  • ‘The Sculpted Word’; ‘Unidentified Museum Objects’; ‘Changing Face’; ‘A Kind of Magic’, Object Cultures: The Nine Collections of The British Museum (with James Putnam), Leeds: Henry Moore Institute, 2003.
  • ‘Contemporary Sculpture’, Second Skin: Historical Life Casting and Contemporary Sculpture, Leeds: Henry Moore Institute, 2001.
  • ‘Introduction to the Exhibition’, Hounds in Leash: The Dog in 18th- & 19th-Century Sculpture, Leeds: Henry Moore Institute, 2000.

Articles and Reviews

  • ‘Queer St Ives and Other Stories’ by Ian Massey, Burlington Magazine, vol. 165, no. 1440, March 2023
  • ‘The Women Who Shaped Modern Art in Britain’ by James Scott, Burlington Magazine, vol. 164, no. 1434, September 2022
  • ‘Barbara Hepworth: Art & Life’ by Eleanor Clayton, Sculpture Journal, 31.2, 2022
  • ‘Iconoclasm and the Museum’ by Stacy Boldrick, Museums Journal, February 2021
  • ‘Pitzhanger Manor & Gallery’, Museums Journal, June 2019
  • ‘Caro in Yorkshire’, Museums Journal, October 2015
  • ‘Ice Age: arrival of the modern mind’, Museums Journal, May 2013
  • ‘The Hepworth Wakefield’, Museums Journal, September 2011
  • ‘Henry Moore at Tate Britain’, Museums Journal, March 2010
  • ‘The Medieval and Renaissance Galleries at the V&A’, Museums Journal, February 2010

Grants

Research Support Grant, Paul Mellon Centre, Spring 2022

Citations