Pelagos
Item
- 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

