“It’s magnificent, it’s really great. It is quite simple and quite a pure piece.”
Israeli sky in Anish’s steel- India-born artist sculpts landmark symbol for museum
Anish Kapoor es un escultor británico nacido en la India.[1] Ha vivido y trabajado en Londres desde que se mudó a esta ciudad para estudiar arte a principios de la década de 1970, primero en el Hornsey College of Art y más tarde en la Chelsea School of Art Design.
Anish Kapoor es uno de los escultores más influyentes de la época, creando esculturas abstractas con diferentes materiales tales como concreto , tiza, fibra de vidrio, pigmentos, piedra, fieltro y acero inoxidable.[2]
Kapoor ve su trabajo como “encarnaciones de mitologías” refiriéndose a la manera en que fueron construidas.[3]
Wikipedia
“It’s magnificent, it’s really great. It is quite simple and quite a pure piece.”
Israeli sky in Anish’s steel- India-born artist sculpts landmark symbol for museum
“It looks stunning and it does exactly what we hoped.”
Israeli sky in Anish’s steel- India-born artist sculpts landmark symbol for museum
The Museum of Contemporary Art on Kapoor’s first major exhibition in Australia.
Exhibition: Anish Kapoor
Concrete playground on Kapoor’s first major exhibition in Australia.
Exhibition: Anish Kapoor
“This rare and inspiring exhibition could hardly help but elicit wonder.”
Art media on Kapoor’s first major exhibition in Australia.
Exhibition: Anish Kapoor
“A drunken party animal of a building and ultimately a celebration of the people of London.”
By Jonathan Jones.
Open thread: With the Orbit Olympic sculpture, is there too much public art?
Anish Kapoor's Olympic Park sculpture sends public art into Orbit