Express & Star

Antony Gormley’s tiny terracotta figures ‘a call to conscience’

It took four days to put each figure in place.

Published
Antony Gormley's latest work

A sculpture of 40,000 tiny terracotta figures by Sir Antony Gormley is on display – with the Angel Of The North sculptor calling it a “call to conscience”.

Field For The British Isles was made in 1993 from around 50 tonnes of brick clay by more than 100 volunteers at a secondary school.

It is now back on show at Firstsite in Colchester, Essex, after 30 people spent four days putting each of the tiny figures in place.

Asked whether some of the tiny clay individuals had been stolen in the past, Sir Antony told the PA news agency: “I think some of these go walkabout, but that’s understandable.”

But he added: “There is not one that is like another.”

Sir Antony said it was impossible to pick a favourite, adding: “How can you? It’s a bit like asking a parent who their favourite child is.”

He said the figures “are looking at us and asking us, ‘What kind of world are you making? What are we doing?'” in this “crazy world”.

Sir Antony told the media it was “rubbish” to have his name in big letters next to the installation because it was a “collective” work.

“Hundreds of people did it, just for the sake of doing it,” he said.

Gurkhas, students and members of a Bangladeshi women’s organisation helped install the piece at Firstsite and “all worked together as one team”.

The Turner Prize winner, a critic of leaving the EU, said it was a time of “national madness” and Brexit is a “disease”.

The initial volunteers who made the sculpture were given just one simple instruction, “hand-sized, stand up and have eyes”.

Field For The British Isles will be on display at Firstsite for four months.

Its director Sally Shaw said: “I think this is probably the most important artwork we could be showing in the UK.

“It’s about community and being together and also about thousands and thousands of individual people.”

She joked about visitors getting close-up to the fragile piece, saying: “I am more worried about adults coming in.

“Children are very excited about it. They stop and lie down on the floor to be on a level with it…

“What I love about it is there are 40,000 figures and 40,000 children and young people living in Colchester. It’s an opportunity to visualise that community. It’s very powerful….

“I’d invite everyone to come. It might be another 20 years before we show it again. This is the kind of artwork this gallery was made for.”

Antony Gormley: Field For The British Isles is on display at Firstsite, Colchester, until March 8 2020.

Sorry, we are not accepting comments on this article.