Kenneth Armitage 1916-2002
26.7 x 30.5 x 29.2 cm
Further images
Armitage was preoccupied with the human body throughout his life and might therefore be classed as a humanist figure sculptor, whose formal language reflected a deep-seated interest in the archaic, the ‘primitive’ and the classical tradition. By reducing the complexities of human anatomy to a series of essential forms and planes Square Seated Figures (1956), possesses a solidity of mass and a monumental presence that evokes the ritualistic and totemic qualities of early Mediterranean art. The connection between Armitage’s modernism and antiquity was explicitly recognised in the exhibition Shaping the Beginning: Ancient Eastern Mediterranean and Modern Artists at the Museum of Cycladic Art (Nicholas P. Goulandris Foundation), Athens (25 May – 16 September 2006). In this context, Square Seated Figures was positioned as a direct descendant of the Cycladic aesthetic, demonstrating how Armitage translated the forms of the ancient world into post-war British sculpture.
Provenance
Paul Rosenberg & Co, New York, 1958Private collection, USA
James Hyman Gallery, London, 2002
Private collection, UK
Exhibitions
Paul Rosenberg & Co, New York, February - March 1958.
Institute of Contemporary Art, The Dana Collection, 1962.
Museum of Cycladic Art (Nicholas P. Goulandris Foundation), Shaping the Beginning: Ancient Eastern Mediterranean and Modern Artists, 25 May - 16 September 2006.
