Barbara Hepworth Museum

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Sphere with Inner Form at the Barbara Hepworth Museum, with Two Forms (Divided Circle) behind

The Barbara Hepworth Museum and Sculpture Garden is found in St Ives in western Cornwall and is devoted to the work of the 20th-century sculptor Barbara Hepworth, whose home this was. The museum preserves her studio and garden much as they were when she lived and worked there. Hepworth purchased the site in 1949 and lived and worked there for 26 years until her death in a fire on the premises in 1975.

History

Hepworth's workshop, left virtually untouched

The studio, known as Trewyn Studio, was purchased by Barbara Hepworth in 1949, and is typical of the stone-built houses in St Ives. Her living room is furnished as she left it, while the workshop remains full of her tools and equipment, materials, and part-worked pieces. The museum was opened by her family in 1976, after Barbara had left instructions to this effect in her will. It is the largest collection of her works that are on permanent display.[1]

The sculptures featured at the museum (mainly in the secluded garden) were some of her favourites. Her workshop also includes a queue of uncut stones that one visitor has described as "still waiting for their moment in the shadow of her workshop". In 1950 she acquired two huge blocks of Galway limestone which she carved into her Festival of Britain commission, the Contrapuntal Forms. A set of photographs in the museum shows the progress of this project. Wood carving was done in an upstairs room, and the bronze statues she started casting in 1956 had their origins in the plaster prototypes she worked on in the upper of the two outside studios.[1]

Hepworth was helped in the creation of the garden by her friend, the South African-born composer Priaulx Rainier.

Barbara Hepworth died in a fire at this site in 1975, when she was aged 72.

The family passed the museum to the Tate gallery in 1980 and they still manage it.

Outside links

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References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Barbara Hepworth in St Ives: The Hepworth Estate

Books

Close up of Hepworth's tools, in the workshop
  • Phillips, Miranda and Stephens, Chris: 'The Barbara Hepworth Sculpture Garden' (Tate Publishing, 2002) ISBN 1-85437-412-5


Tate

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