Pelagos
Pelagos (‘sea’ in Greek) was inspired by a view of the bay at St Ives in Cornwall, where two arms of land enfold the sea on either side. The hollowed-out wood has a spiral formation resembling a shell, a wave or the roll of a hill. Hepworth wanted the taut strings to express ‘the tension I felt between myself and the sea, the wind or the hills’. She moved to Cornwall with her husband Ben Nicholson in 1939, and produced some of her finest sculpture in its wild landscape.
- Title (Dublin Core)
- Pelagos
- Description (Dublin Core)
- Pelagos (‘sea’ in Greek) was inspired by a view of the bay at St Ives in Cornwall, where two stretches of land surround the sea on either side. The hollowed-out sculpture has a spiral form resembling a shell, a wave or the roll of a hill. Hepworth wanted the taut strings to express ‘the tension I felt between myself and the sea, the wind or the hills’. She moved to Cornwall with her husband, painter Ben Nicholson in 1939 and produced some of her best-known sculpture inspired by its wild landscape.
- Type (Dublin Core)
- abstract (general art genre)
- Subject (Dublin Core)
- Sculpture
- Creator (Dublin Core)
- Hepworth, Barbara
- Date Created (Dublin Core)
- 1946
- Extent (Dublin Core)
-
14 1/2" x 15 1/4" x 13(430 x 460 x 385cm)
15.2 kg - Coverage (Dublin Core)
- Tate Modern (Gallery) Tate Modern :
- Rights (Dublin Core)
- © Bowness
- Rights Holder (Dublin Core)
- Musée Rodin (Paris, France): Barbara Hepworth at the Rodin Museum
- Identifier (Dublin Core)
- Bio_Sculpt008_DBH_Pelagos
- Source (Dublin Core)
- Tate Modern
- Item sets
- The Biomorphism



