- Alison Wilding
Alison Wilding (born
July 7 ,1948 ) is an English sculptor.Born in
Blackburn inLancashire , Wilding studied at theNottingham College of Art, the Ravensbourne College of Art and Design inChislehurst and, from 1970 to 1973, theRoyal College of Art inLondon . She rose to prominence around the late 1970s, about the same time as Richard Deacon,Tony Cragg ,Bill Woodrow and others.Wildings' early works are multi-media installations, but she is best known for her later abstract sculptures which use a wide variety of materials: as well as traditional materials such as
wood , stone andbronze , she has usedsteel ,wax ,silk and other materials. These are often used in unusual combinations: "Stormy Weather" (1987), for example, is made frompigment ,beeswax andoil rubbed intogalvanised steel .In 1991, a major retrospective of Wilding's work, "Alison Wilding: Immersion – Sculpture from Ten Years", was held at
Tate Liverpool . She was nominated for theTurner Prize in 1992, and made aRoyal Academician in 1999. Her only large-scale public artwork "Ambit" was installed in the RiverWear atSunderland in 1999, taking the form of a necklace of stainless-steel tubes floting in the river, and lit up from underwater at night. It was subsequently exhibited in theManchester Ship Canal and is now in storage.External links
* [http://arts.guardian.co.uk/reviews/story/0,,702673,00.html "Floating art evokes city's past" - Peter Hetherington in the Guardian]
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