Stalemate

STALEMATE

Stalemate - Sculpture of two semi-abstract figures facing one another across a chess board. Their heads are represented by plain balls.

Project Details

Dimensions (cm): 40 x 25 x 15 (w x h x d)

Weight: 3.9kg

Date: 1994

Chess… …Stalemate

This work was created during divorce proceedings which are painful times. Hence STALEMATE.

My plan for the sculpture was to sell the idea to a city that was hosting the Chess World Championships and then to make the correct number of pieces for the actual position of Stalemate but designing the pieces to reflect the corporate image of the sponsor of the tournament.

I imagined the bronze enlarged to life-and-a-half size and perhaps being shown in Iceland where there is a huge interest in Sculpture as well as in Chess.  Many of the Icelandic sculptors cast their work here in the UK and I have often met them in foundries.

Currently the sculpture is a only wooden maquette, but I am keen to have it cast!

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The British Gas Flame

The British Gas Flame

The British Gas Flame

Project Details

Dimensions (m): 7.5m high

Commissioned by: British Gas plc

Date: 1990

The British Gas Flame

In 1990 the then Chairman of British Gas, Robert Evans, wanted a major sculpture positioned outside their then headquarters building on the corner of Vauxhall Bridge, very nearly opposite the Tate Gallery, originally the Rank Hovis MacDougall building.

Of course to have a work so prominently placed in central London was every sculptor’s dream and so when Derek Portsmouth arranged a meeting with Robert, I was delighted and was duly commissioned to produce a series of smallish maquettes from which the final work was chosen.  Then it was how to enlarge the sculpture to about 7 metres in height.

I worked with Auriol Pace and her Father Roy and in their garden in West Ashling and after considerable technical difficulties, we made one of the five fins with yacht building materials. The pattern was finalised by Montagues, the well known pattern makers in Slough and then an associated firm produced an armature in steel to support the pattern which was used to make the 5 fins.

The cast sections for each fin then had to be made and welded to the armature, each of the fins having 6 castings, so thirty in total. Very very careful chasing was necessary to get perfect lines up the whole length of the sculpture and of course the finished work showed no joins whatsoever.

HRH Prince Charles The Prince of Wales had agreed to unveil the work and we had landscaped the front of the building beautifully. Sadly for us, at the very last minute there was a hitch when the British Gas chairman had a massive rise in income and was hounded in the British press as the very first ‘FATCAT’. He telephoned me with the news and asked “Had I seen ‘The Sun’?” I hadn’t! It was desperate… the sculpture was manufactured and ready for delivery and then immediately cancelled in case there was a shareholders revolt!

However calm eventually prevailed and subsequently there were two castings made, beautifully patinated a greeny blue colour, and clever lighting design from a pit below the sculpture made The Flame seem to flicker like a real gas flame. They looked particularly amazing at night.

The first work was installed at Reading at Thames Valley Park in front of the middle of three British Gas Exploration and Production buildings which we once again landscaped. It was dedicated by John Redwood, the MP for nearby Wokingham.

The second work, a year later was installed in between the University and the British Gas Research and Development HQ in Loughborough.

These were major works for the team at the foundry, with the technical work alone costing over £100,000 per casting.

[unitegallery British_Gas_Flame]

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Sybil

SYBIL

Sybil

Project Details

Dimensions: 40cm x 180cm x 40cm (w x h x d)

Weight: 30kg

Date: 2007

Limited Edition: 8 (casts available)

 

Sybil

I was busy being inspired by Giacometti while working in my London studio when a notable interior decorator came to see me for a cup of tea, or an early evening glass of wine; I can’t remember which!

What I do remember is that she asked me what I was intending to put on the head of my lady sculpture………….a hat?

I picked up a round margarine carton on the table and placing it on the sculpture’s head, took some softened wax and made the rim and produced the hat you now see cast in bronze.

“Oh my goodness……………….Sybil!” she exclaimed.

Sybil who I asked?

“Why Sybil Thorndike* of course!”

“When we were young Sybil and I would walk up Bayswater to Whiteleys department store and buy picture hats before strolling back to Belgravia across Hyde Park , really looking the part, seriously glamorous and trying to catch the eye of the best looking young gentlemen.”

Hence ‘Sybil’. She has a wonderful presence and first rate provenance and I am actually very fond of her. This is an edition of 8 and there are still casts of this work available.

 

*Dame Sybil Thorndike (1882 – 1976) was a famous English actress who toured internationally in Shakespearean productions, often appearing with her husband Lewis Casson. George Bernard Shaw wrote Saint Joan (1923) specially for her, and she starred in it with great success. She was made a Dame in 1931, and a Companion of Honour in 1970.  She was quite a character and when asked if she had ever considered leaving her husband, she answered: “Divorce, never!  Murder, often!

Sybil - a tall standing female figure, very slim with a wasp waist and arms parallel to her body wearing a wide-brimmed hat

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The Keris

The Keris

THE KERIS

The Keris

Neil talks about how The Keris got commissioned and how it was made

 

Project Details

Commissioned by: Dato’ Sri, now Tun Dr. Mahathir bin Mohamad – Prime Minister of Malaysia

Client:  The Government of Malaysia

Dimensions: 17m x 2m x 5m (h x w x d)

Weight: 10,000kg

Date: 1996-1997

Edition: 1 of 1

The Keris

In a conversation in London in 1996, I was asked if I could produce a major sculpture for a proposed international sports stadium.  Of course I answered in the affirmative.  This was to be by far the biggest sculptural contract I was ever to be given and it was through the generosity of Tan Sri Arumagum to whom I will always be so very grateful.

At the time, I was collaborating with my then wife, Auriol, who had considerable design and drawing skills as well as understanding architectural plans and was generally very savvy!  I told her about the possibility of us producing a sculpture for the Commonwealth Games stadium at Bukit Jalil, about 20km south of Kuala Lumpur.  It turned out to be the 4th biggest stadium in the world and is now the Malaysian National Stadium!

I was invited to a meeting at The Savoy, to meet Dato Seri Mahathir Mohammad, the Prime Minister of Malaysia, and some of his ministers.  I was met by Sir Tim Bell (now Lord Bell) and Sir Charles Powell (now Lord Powell of Bayswater), both of whom had been right hand men to Mrs Thatcher when she was in 10 Downing Street.  They quizzed me to check my credentials!

Happily, I passed the test and we ended up modifying one of Auriol’s designs from which we created a major heroic bronze sculpture, 17 metres high and weighing over 10 tons.  We eventually installed it with foundations and structural advice from John Laing, the civil engineers, in front of enormous arches fronting the stadium which were considerably larger than Marble Arch in London!

Our design brief included these massive arches and a 100 metre long water feature which reflects the bronze Keris at the stadium end so that when viewed from the far end of the water feature, it appears to be lying in its sheath.  A Keris (pronounced kris) is an asymmetrical dagger associated with the culture of Indonesia but also indigenous to Malaysia, Thailand, Brunei and Singapore and also known in the Philippines.  It is famous for its distinctive wavy blade.

There is a strong degree of mythology surrounding The Keris which essentially has to draw blood once drawn but can also, folk stories tell, be drawn, kill your foe and return to its sheath all by itself!  Little wonder that the Prime Minister ran from his office when I drew the Keris to discuss the project with him at Government House in KL!

The sculpture took 2 years to make.  The enlargement was done by me with Haligon in Paris and then the armature designed and made in steel by a company in Slough.  The numerous sections of the sculpture were all cast in bronze at the Burleighfield Art Foundry and then each one argon welded to the armature and chased to finally produce this huge and beautiful Keris dagger.  The patination was all done on site in Malaysia.  The handle of the Keris was made separately from the blade and can be seen sitting in the foundry next to one of Elizabeth Frinks Male Heads in the video accompanying this text.

It was a long and fascinating story producing this work, with numerous 13 hour flights to and from KL, so please look at the video to see the details of how and why this whole design project all happened. HM The Queen visited KL and met us at the stadium.  We were introduced to her as the sculptors who created this work in the UK, when she visited to close the 1998 Commonwealth Games as she had not been available to open it.

The sculpture was originally dedicated by the Malaysian Prime Minister and his then deputy at a pre-games celebration a few months earlier than the actual games themselves.  The whole stadium and its frontage with the arches, the water feature and the Keris were extremely impressive especially when decked with all the Commonwealth flags and lit up at night. This sculpture is now held in great esteem as a national monument and a centre point for visitors who like to be photographed next to it, or sitting on its handle.  We were very proud to have made this work with a host of craftsmen from France, the UK and Malaysia all involved in its production over a 2 year time span.

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Tortelier

Tortelier

TORTELIER

Tortelier - on the angle - bronze sculpture

Project Details

Dimensions: 21cm x 26cm x 24cm (w x h x d)

Weight: 3.9kg

Date: 1990

Bronze Edition: 8 (casts available)

Tortelier

Paul Tortelier was a French cellist of considerable talent and with an international reputation.  His English was good and he was persuaded by the BBC to allow them to televise him giving masterclasses to some select pupils.  The result was unexpectedly extraordinary television even to non-musicians.

He was so vibrant and charismatic. His energy and passion passed right through the screen and the masterclass dynamic was so unknown to the majority of the TV audience, that the experiment became a regular fixture on the BBC throughout the 60s and 70s.  He was truly inspirational. As he caressed the most amazing sounds from his cello, he became lost in the music and his fine head vibrated passionately from side to side.

On the night he died it was my Mother’s 76th birthday and we had celebrated with dinner in London. Later that evening, I heard the news in my London studio and I made this model in just a few hours before retiring to bed. Next day I looked at the work and thought that I had captured Tortelier ‘in the moment’.

Paul Tortelier     21 March 1914 – 18 December 1990

 

I had the work cast in bronze and the strings fabricated in copper wire. It is an edition of 8 and was first cast by the Burleighfield Foundry in Beaconsfield.

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