Culture Art

Phyllida Barlow: dock at Tate Britain

Phyllida Barlow: dock at Tate Britain | Exhibition review

Phyllida Barlow’s latest series of sculptures, entitled dock, was yesterday unveiled to the public at the Tate Britain. This work was created by the established artist for the Tate Britain Commission, an annual initiative that invites artists to respond to the collection of British and international art and to the grand spaces of the Duveen Galleries at the heart of Tate Britain.

Barlow, whose definitive style of sculpting involves using inexpensive and everyday materials on a large scale, continues in this vain for this work. The eight pieces are constructed using mostly cardboard, plywood and canvas, are difficult to distinguish from one another, and almost merge into one.

In this way, each piece acts as an inextricable part of a whole – that is, part of the dock environment of the river Thames by which the gallery sits. I wanted to explore two contradictory aspects explains Barlow, the enclosed gallery interiors against the ever-present aspect of the river beyond.

In viewing the work, one certainly gets this sense as in dock: 5 hung blocks, a piece consisting of a ceiling-height frame of plywood from which huge cardboard blocks are suspended, taking up space obtrusively. Yet moving on to dock:hungprongsplastercoils, made of a similar frame, one is inundated with space enough to move around and observe two hanging giant, anchor-like forms from below.

Indeed, visitors are encouraged to negotiate their own path through the work, looking up, down, across and around a network of components that hang from the wooden structures or rest on the floor, making for an unusually interactive experience. One feels in awe and a little wary of the industrial size and sense of one’s surroundings, while being aware of the reality of its flimsiness. It is a little surreal as well as fantastic.

Kate Knowles

Phyllida Barlow: dock is at Tate Britain until 29th October 2014. For further information or to book visit the gallery’s website here.

More in Art

Mona Hatoum Encounters: Giacometti at the Barbican

Constance Ayrton

The Conjuring: Last Rites – Occult Museum Experience

Ezelle Alblas

Tom Van Herrewege: Drawings in the Depths at the Florence Trust

James White

The Beatles Story at the Royal Albert Dock

Cristiana Ferrauti

Marcin Rusak and Maison Perrier-Jouët unveil multi-sensory art installation revealing hidden signals of plants

Food & Travel Desk

Millet: Life on the Land at the National Gallery

Constance Ayrton

The Audacity at Boxpark Shoreditch

Christina Yang

Future of Food at the Science Museum

Umar Ali

UNIQLO Tate Play: Monster Chetwynd: Thunder, Crackle and Magic at Tate Modern

Umar Ali