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FieldField from 1991 is a sculpture by British artist Antony Gormley. It consists of approx. 35,000 individual terracotta figures, each between 8 and 26cm high, installed on the floor of a room facing the viewer. The figures were sculpted in Choluta, Mexico by about 60 members of a Texca family of brickmakers, under the supervision of the artist. The sculpture received a lot of media attention upon its first display, and many affectionate parodies.

FieldField has been installed and displayed at various locations. The specific configuration is changed to suit each location, but the miniature figures are always placed to form a dense carpet with each figure looking towards the viewer. Ideally the Field is extended through a doorway or round a corner, so that the figures going out of sight leave the impression of an unlimited horde.

Several other versions of Field have subsequently been created, including:

  • Amazonian Field (1991) made in Portp Velho, Brazil (approx. 24,000 figures)
  • Field for the British Isles (1993) made in St. Helens near Liverpool, UK (approx. 40,000 figures)
  • European Field (1993) made in Ostra, Sweden (approx. 40,000 figures)
  • Asian Field (2003) made in Xianshan Village, Guangdong, China (approx. 190,000 figures)

Field for the British Isles was typical in recruiting some 100 volunteers from the pupils and their extended families, of two local schools in St Helens. FieldEach volunteer was given a portion of the 30 tonnes of clay required, along with some loose instructions specifying the rough size and proportions for the figures. An accidental feature of the original Field was that Texca family involved people aged from 6 to 60 working on the figures, and Gormely felt that the involvement of three generations of a family should be continued in all the subsequent version.

Gormley has also made several other works entitled Field, but these are smaller groups of life size figures more typical of Gormley's earlier work.

In 1994, Antony Gormley won the Turner Prize with a collection of his work, including Field for the British Isles, shown at the Tate Gallery, London, UK.

 

Source: Wikipedia

 
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