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Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Lynn Chadwick, Stairs (C125S), 1990
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Lynn Chadwick, Stairs (C125S), 1990

Lynn Chadwick British, 1914-2003

Stairs (C125S), 1990
Bronze
105 x 53.2 x 37 cm
41 3/8 x 21 x 14 5/8 in
Edition 7 of 9

Further images

  • (View a larger image of thumbnail 1 ) Terence Coventry, Torso II (TC347), 2016
  • (View a larger image of thumbnail 2 ) Terence Coventry, Torso II (TC347), 2016
Lynn Chadwick was a master of presenting the human form, reducing complex shape and curve to geometric shape. ‘Stairs’ 1990 is an exceptional example of Chadwick’s later figurative style which...
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Lynn Chadwick was a master of presenting the human form, reducing complex shape and curve to geometric shape. ‘Stairs’ 1990 is an exceptional example of Chadwick’s later figurative style which is instantly recognisable across the globe.

Experimenting with showing movement ‘Stairs’ is a playful piece where Chadwick's signature triangulated faces, devoid of expression, powerfully portray a moment of two female figures passing on the stairs leaving it to the viewer to interpret the possible exchange of words or glance as the moment unfolds.

Lynn Chadwick came to sculpture through unconventional means initially working as an architectural draughtsman. He began his sculptural career making mobile constructions for building trade fairs and it was the resulting success of these early mobiles and stabiles two of which were shown on the South Bank during the Festival of Britain in 1951, that first allowed him to seriously consider becoming a freelance sculptor.

Chadwick’s unique approach was based on construction rather than modelling. First, he welded a linear armature or skeleton onto which he applied a skin, building up the surface to a solid form. By beginning with an abstract form or ‘space frame’ and investing it with an allusive vitality Chadwick’s working process is the reverse of most traditional approaches. The results are equally as original and each work has a carefully considered ‘attitude’ communicated through stance, texture and finish. Speaking of the process of making art Chadwick noted:

It seems to me that art must be the manifestation of some vital force coming from the dark, caught by the imagination and translated by the artist’s ability and skill… whatever the final stage, the force behind it is… indivisible.

Chadwick first came to international prominence in 1952 when he was included in the British Council’s 'New Aspects of British Sculpture' exhibition for the XXVI Venice Biennale alongside Kenneth Armitage, Reg Butler, Bernard Meadows, Geoffrey Clarke, Robert Adam, William Turnbull and Eduardo Paolozzi. The following year he was one of the twelve semi-finalists for the Unknown Political Prisoner International Sculpture Competition and went on to win the International Prize for sculpture at the 1956 Venice Biennale, beating Giacometti. Many honours and awards followed this period and his work was widely collected both privately and by major institutions globally. In 1964, he was awarded a CBE and in 2001 was elected a Royal Academician. A major retrospective of his work was held at Tate Britain, London in 2003.

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Provenance

From the artist's estate

Exhibitions

Gallery Nii, Osaka, October 1991. 
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