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The
Art of Survival
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Anish Kapoor
Born 1954 Untitled 2007
Gouache on paper
50.5 x 67 cm
Courtesy: the artist |
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An exhibition and auction of works donated by British &
international
artists to raise funds for the Helen
Bamber Foundation
5 - 7 May 2009 at
Maddox Arts, 52 Brook's Mews,
London W1K 4ED
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Anish
Kapoor was born in Bombay in India and moved to Britain in 1972. There he
studied art first in Hornsey and later in Chelsea. He has lived in Bristol
since then, though frequently makes trips back to India, and has acknowledged
that his work is inspired by both western and eastern culture.
In the early 1980s, Kapoor emerged as one of a number of British sculptors
working in a new style and gaining some international recognition with their
work (the others included Tony Cragg, Richard Deacon, Anthony Gormley, Bill
Woodrow and Richard Wentworth).
Kapoor's pieces are often simple, curved forms, usually monochrome, and
frequently brightly coloured. Powdered pigments sometimes cover the works and
sometimes lie on the floor around the works as well. This practice is inspired
by the mounds of brightly coloured pigments Kapoor saw on his visits to India.
From the end of the 1990s, Kapoor produced a number of very large works,
including Taratantara (1999), a 35 metre-tall piece installed in the Baltic
Flour Mills in Gateshead before renovation began there, and Marsyas (2002), a
large work of steel and polyvinyl chloride installed in the Turbine Hall of
Tate Modern. In 2000, one of Kapoor's works, Parabolic Waters, consisting of
rapidly rotating coloured water, was shown outside the Millennium Dome in
London.
Kapoor represented Britain in the 1990 Venice Biennale, and the following year
he won the Turner Prize.
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If you would like to know more about our work go to the Helen
Bamber Foundation
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The Helen Bamber Foundation
5 Museum House
25 Museum Street
London WC1A 1JT
Phone: 020 7631
4492 Fax:
020 7631 4493
Email us at
info@helenbamber.org
Registered Charity No. 1111048 |
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