The Horizontal: From Westminister Abbey to Keith Arnatt (YCL Extended Network)

  • 26 Jan 2015
  • 6:30 PM - 7:30 PM
  • Sainsbury Wing Theatre, The National Gallery, London WC2N 5DN


The Paul Mellon Lecture Series 2015
presents

The Horizontal
From Westminister Abbey to Keith Arnatt



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Monday 26 January 2015
6:30 - 7:30 pm
Sainsbury Wing Theatre
The National Gallery
Trafalgar Square
London WC2N 5DN

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About the Event:
The second lecture of a series of five begins with the effigy and looks at the way in which it has informed sculptural language more widely. Moving on to the recumbent form as developed in Renaissance and Classical funerary sculpture and then by Henry Moore, the lecture looks more broadly at sculpture's tendency to embrace the ground as a place of rest, as many contemporary sculptors have shown.

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About the Lecture Series:
The Yale Club of London is proud to announce the Paul Mellon Lecture Series 2015:  Sculpture on the Threshold - An enquiry into the underlying forms of sculpture, by Penelope Curtis, Director of Tate Britain

The lecture series will take place between Monday 19 January and 16 February and consists of five lectures sponsored by the Paul Mellon Centre.  These lectures will take a wide-ranging look at the underlying forms of sculpture. Focusing on four key aspects - the vertical, the horizontal, the closed and the open - the lectures explore sculptural forms across time, and suggest fundamental continuities. Taking examples from the early medieval to the present, and looking at utilitarian as well as idealising formulae, the series suggests that we bring a deep subliminal understanding to our experience of sculpture, and that sculpture occupies a position on the physical and conceptual threshold of our familiar world.

This year, the lectures will be delivered by Penelope Curtis, Director of Tate Britain. Curtis has principally published on sculpture after Rodin, but as curator of the Henry Moore Institute in Leeds she also developed a wide-ranging programme examining the materials and meanings of sculpture across time and place. She has written for and about many contemporary artists, and her most recent book is 'Patio and Pavilion: The Place of Sculpture in Modern Architecture' (Ridinghouse/Getty, 2007/8).

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Registration:
Tickets are £6/£4 concessions for each lecture and you can purchase tickets online through The National Gallery website (click here).

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About the Paul Mellon Lectures:
The Paul Mellon Lectures, which are named in honour of the philanthropist and collector of British art, Paul Mellon (1907–1999), were inaugurated in 1994 when Professor Francis Haskell delivered the first series at the National Gallery in London. The model for the series was the Andrew W. Mellon lectures, established in 1949 in honour of Paul Mellon’s father, the founder of the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. The lectures are given biennially by a distinguished historian of British art.
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