(1903 – 1975), United Kingdom

Barbara Hepworth Biography

Barbara Hepworth was a pioneering British modernist sculptor interested carving simple organic forms in marble, stone, and wood. She also made bronzes, drawings, and lithographic prints. Hepworth, with her friends, helped introduce a radical continental aesthetic to a conservative island nation.

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Life

Educated at Wakefield Girls High School, Hepworth won a scholarship to go to Leeds School of Art in 1920. There she met Henry Moore, who became a life-long friend and affectionate rival. In 1921, they went to London to study at the Royal College of Art for four years, making the occasional study trip to Paris.

In 1924, she was awarded a West Riding Scholarship for a year's travel and went to Italy to study Romanesque and early Renaissance art, nurturing her classical sensibility. In Florence, she married fellow artist, John Skeaping, and in Rome she learned to carve marble from Giovanni Ardini.

When Skeaping became ill, he and Hepworth returned to London in 1926. In 1931, she met the painter and chair of the experimental Seven and Five society, Ben Nicholson, and they became romantically involved. She separated from Skeaping in 1931 and married Nicholson in 1938.

Nicholson and Unit One Art Movement

Nicholson was passionate about abstraction, but like Hepworth, curious about Surrealism, so they went to Paris in 1933, visiting the studios of Pablo Picasso, Constantin Brancusi, and Jean Arp. Back in London, they co-founded the Unit One art movement, which aimed at uniting the two genres. In 1934, Hepworth had triplets, but managed to continue her practice as well as raise children.

In 1935, she and Nicholson met Piet Mondrian, Wassily Kandinsky, and Naum Gabo. Some of her works began to show the influence of the School of Paris, such as the Brancusi-like Two Segments and Sphere (1935—1936), in marble.

In 1939, Hepworth and Nicholson moved to the Cornish fishing village of St. Ives where they attracted other painters and sculptors, as well as some overseas artists like Gabo. It became a very highly regarded and popular art centre, for a time second only to London.

The 1940s

Due to the war, and one studio being destroyed by bombs, Hepworth and Nicholson moved to Carbis Bay at the end of 1939, where there was a studio and garden. In 1947, Hepworth began a series of drawings of surgeons operating in hospitals. She saw multiple connections between artists and hospital staff: 'There is, it seems to me, a close affinity between the work and approach of both physicians and surgeons, and painters and sculptors.'

Artworks

[Artworks Content]__

Gallery

On Ocula, the artist is represented by Pace Gallery.

Website

Barbara Hepworth's website can be found here.

John Hurrell | Ocula | 2021

Barbara Hepworth
featured artworks

Assembly of Square Forms by Barbara Hepworth contemporary artwork print
Barbara Hepworth Assembly of Square Forms, 1970 Screenprint on TH Saunders wove paper
78.1 x 58.1 cm
Dellasposa Gallery Contact Gallery
Stringed figure (Curlew) (Maquette l) by Barbara Hepworth contemporary artwork sculpture
Barbara Hepworth Stringed figure (Curlew) (Maquette l), 1956 Brass and strings on wooden base
24 x 33 x 22.5 cm
Pace Gallery

Barbara Hepworth
recent exhibitions

Represented by this
Ocula Member Gallery

Pace Gallery contemporary art gallery in 540 West 25th Street, New York, United States
Pace Gallery Hong Kong, London, Los Angeles, New York, Tokyo +2

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