Gabo's Stones: Naum Gabo
Exhibition
16th February 1995 - 5th May 1995
Mezzanine, Leeds Art Gallery
The career of Naum Gabo (1890 - 1977) began before the Russian Revolution and was based for the last thirty years of his life in the United States, but has always had an important following in Britain.
The significance of Gabo's constructions - in iron and early plastics and then in Perspex - is well known in the development of modern sculpture. His time in Britain - first in London and then in St. Ives - is equally significant within the history of British art.
Less well known are the stone carvings which Gabo made, though only occasionally, throughout his life. The small study show in Leeds brought together an important representation of these carvings, from the collections of Gabo's family and the Tate Gallery.
The carvings have a fascinating range in scale, from tiny, hand-held pieces made as presents or as private talismans, to larger works which surprise be thier very solidity. Whatever the scale, the carvings delight the eye by the beauty of their material and the continuity of thier lines, and reveal an organic quality which surprises those who think of Gabo as a mathematician of synthetic materals.
This exhibition comprised 16 sculptures, from 1930 throguh to the 1960s.