Tuesday, 24 November 2015

Richard Deacon


Richard Deacon

Richard Deacon, born on the 15th August 1949, is a British abstract sculptor and winner of the turner prize. 

Born: Bangor, Wales
Education: St Martin's School of Art
Known for: Sculpture
Movement: New British Sculpture
Awards: Turner Prize (1987)

Richard Deacon was born in Bangor in Wales and educated at Plymouth College. He then studied at the Somerset College of Art, Taunton, at St Martin's School of Art, London and at the Royal College of Art, also in London. Richard Deacon left the Royal College in 1977 and went on to study part-time at the Chelsea School of Art. Deacons style of art is Abstract, but often alludes to anatomical functions. His work is often constructed from everyday materials such as laminated Plywood and he calls himself a "fabricator" rather than a "sculptor". His early pieces are typically made up of sleek curved forms and then later his works became much more bulky. Deacons body of work includes small-scale works suitable for showing in art galleries, as well as much larger pieces shown in sculpture gardens and objects often made for specific events such as dance performances. Deacon won the turner prize in 1987 after having previously been nominated in 1984. 

Magdalena Abakanowicz


Magdalena Abakanowicz



Magdalena Abakanowicz, born on the 20th of June 1930, is a Polish sculptor and fiber artist from Falenty. Magdalena Abakanowicz studied at the Warsaw Academy of Fine Arts and won a Leonardo da Vinci World Award of Arts in 1999. Abakanowicz currently lives and works in Warsaw.

Most pieces of her early artwork were lost or damaged during her moving from place to place when she was younger. Only few sketches were found in good condition. Later on she then recreated some of her early works from memory. 


During the 1970s and 1980s she changed her medium and scale and began working on sculptures of headless and armless humans made of sackcloth which is sewn together and bonded with synthetic resins. 

Magdalena Abakanowicz wanted to 'break the norm' and create her own style of art which nobody else had thought of before.