All that glistens isn't gold.
Dec. 23rd, 2008 08:17 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I went from the Gagosian to the British Museum. Mostly to look for presents in the shop, but I had a look around, of course. Prompted by
delilly I wanted to see the Rosetta stone, which I must have seen many times before.
I also looked at a dispersed exhibition called Statuephilia, featuring works by Antony Gormley, Marc Quinn, Damien Hirst, Ron Muerk and Tim Noble and Sue Webster.
The work by Quinn is a gold sculpture of Kate Moss, called Siren. I like some of Quinn’s work – I loved his statue of Alison Lipper which stood on the empty plinth in Trafalgar Square - but I didn’t like this piece at all. Why Moss? Because she was famous? Why gold? Did it matter? To me, no – but it was the only statue in a room of priceless Greek statues that was sealed away, presumably at the request of the museum’s insurers.
Frankly, it seemed a bit tacky to me: like showing off in gold.
The Damien Hirst consisted of painted skulls. I have no idea if the skulls were reall or not. It didn’t grab me at all – like much of Hirst’s work, I was left thinking “so what?”
It won’t surprise you at all that I loved the Gormley – a maquette of the Angel of the North called “Case for an Angel I”. This angel seemed to be female – I thought I saw a hint of breasts (I could be wrong – I thought Gormley based most of his work on his own body). The angel stands on a plinth in the main entrance, stretched out across the atrium. Wonderful. Really wonderful.
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I also looked at a dispersed exhibition called Statuephilia, featuring works by Antony Gormley, Marc Quinn, Damien Hirst, Ron Muerk and Tim Noble and Sue Webster.
The work by Quinn is a gold sculpture of Kate Moss, called Siren. I like some of Quinn’s work – I loved his statue of Alison Lipper which stood on the empty plinth in Trafalgar Square - but I didn’t like this piece at all. Why Moss? Because she was famous? Why gold? Did it matter? To me, no – but it was the only statue in a room of priceless Greek statues that was sealed away, presumably at the request of the museum’s insurers.
Frankly, it seemed a bit tacky to me: like showing off in gold.
The Damien Hirst consisted of painted skulls. I have no idea if the skulls were reall or not. It didn’t grab me at all – like much of Hirst’s work, I was left thinking “so what?”
It won’t surprise you at all that I loved the Gormley – a maquette of the Angel of the North called “Case for an Angel I”. This angel seemed to be female – I thought I saw a hint of breasts (I could be wrong – I thought Gormley based most of his work on his own body). The angel stands on a plinth in the main entrance, stretched out across the atrium. Wonderful. Really wonderful.