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Tate Britain Exhibition

Anthony Caro

26 January – 17 April 2005

Sir Anthony Caro, Early One Morning 1962. Tate. Courtesy of Barford Sculptures Ltd.

Sir Anthony Caro
Early One Morning (1962)
Tate

Courtesy of Barford Sculptures Ltd

Britain's greatest living sculptor
The Independent

A brilliant innovator
Art Review

Sir Anthony Caro is widely regarded as one of the world's greatest living sculptors. This major retrospective, presented in the artist's eightieth year, surveys over fifty years of his work. On show are seminal pieces from the early 1960s, including the ground-breaking steel sculptures which established Caro's reputation, in the context of new and recent works in which fresh lines of innovation and development are apparent.

Caro first achieved widespread recognition in the early 1960s. He abandoned his earlier, figurative way of working which involved modelling in clay and casting in bronze, and began to make purely abstract works: sculpture constructed and welded in steel, comprising beams, girders and other found elements painted in bright colours. Such works caused a sensation, provoking a response from some critics that these constructions were not sculpture at all.

Nevertheless, Caro's innovations heralded a revolution in art. Within a short period, conventional ideas about materials, surface, scale, form and space were overturned by his radical reworking of all these elements. Foremost was Caro's insistence on the immediate, real, physical presence of the sculpture - placed directly on the ground - a principle which became widely imitated and subsequently becoming a touchstone for contemporary sculpture.

This exhibition surveys all of Caro's major developments and fills the Level 2 Exhibition Galleries as well as the central Duveen galleries with significant sculptures from public and private collections in the UK, USA and Europe.

Tate Britain

Millbank
London SW1P 4RG
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Dates

26 January – 17 April 2005

Find out more

  • The poetics of space

    Norman Foster and Anthony Caro

    Sculptors and architects both work with form in space, albeit on different scales and using varying methods. Anthony Caro, known for taking sculpture off the plinth, likes the idea that the art form ‘has another sort of life… that’s a bit closer to architecture’. On the eve of his retrospective at Tate Britain – its largest sculpture show to date – he shares some common ground with ‘gherkin’ architect Norman Foster

  • Early one morning

    Michael Fried and Charles Ray

    Sculptors and architects both work with form in space, albeit on different scales and using varying methods. Anthony Caro, known for taking sculpture off the plinth, likes the idea that the artform ‘has another sort of life… that’s a bit closer to architecture’. On the eve of his retrospective at Tate Britain – its largest sculpture show to date – American artist Charles Ray tells Michael Fried about Caro’s influence on his work

  • Anthony Caro Millbank Steps 2005

    When art meets architecture

    Richard MacCormac

    Richard MacCormac reflects on the relationship between sculpture and architecture in the light of a visit to Anthony Caro's retrospective at Tate Britain.

  •  
     

    Peter Fuller Memorial Lecture: Sir Anthony Caro

    2010 marks the twentieth anniversary of the death of the influential and controversial art critic Peter Fuller. To mark this occasion Sir Anthony Caro is in conversation with Paul Moorhouse.

  • Artist

    Sir Anthony Caro

    1924–2013
Artwork
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