Barbara Hepworth 1903-1975
7 x 5.5 x 6.5 cm
Further images
This delicately carved alabaster head showcases Hepworth’s sensitivity to material and form. Here she has produced a work of remarkable restraint and refinement, with the gentle planes of the face and the subtle articulation of the brow existing somewhere between abstraction and representation. Executed with characteristic directness and economy, this small-scale sculpture is carved in alabaster, whose inherent luminosity enhances the sense of interiority, imbuing the head with a quiet, almost devotional character. The intimate and sensitive nature of the work is further heightened by the fact that it was given by the artist to her stepdaughter, Kate Nicholson. As such, it occupies a poignant position within Hepworth’s oeuvre, bridging the private sphere of family life with her broader sculptural concerns.
Hepworth’s engagement with the art of the ancient Mediterranean was significantly deepened by her travels to the region. Her visit to Greece and the Cycladic islands in 1954 proved revelatory; she described the experience as a moment of profound inspiration, producing drawings for sculptures explicitly titled after ancient sites such as Delphi, Delos, Mycenae and Epidauros. Hepworth was captivated by the Aegean light and the ancient physical landscape, which she channelled into her work. The resulting forms resonate with prehistoric standing stones and megalithic structures, lending a sense of monumentality to her sculpture. This connection between human form, landscape and archaic objects invites comparison with the stillness and timeless character of Cycladic idols, whose simplified geometry find clear echoes in Hepworth’s carving.
Provenance
A birthday gift from the Artist to Kate NicholsonMartin Daniels (Assistant and Caregiver to Kate Nicholson)
Linda and John Williamson, 2006
John West, London, 2014
