Antony Gormley: Blind Light is showing at Hayward Gallery until 19 August 2007 and represents the first major London showing of Antony Gormley’s work.
The exhibition features a series of brand new monumental works specially conceived for the Hayward’s distinctive gallery spaces, which take Gormley’s work in a radical new direction.
It also includes one of the largest ever urban public art commissions, Event Horizon, which features 31 sculptural casts of the artist’s body placed on rooftops and public walkways across central London.
For this exhibition, Gormley has created a series of spectacular newly commissioned works that take the human form as their starting point but abstract the figure to the limits of readability.
Opening the show is Space Station, a colossal six-metre high steel mass weighing 22 tonnes, which from various vantage points in the gallery reveals itself as the human form curled into the foetal position.
The work is illuminated solely by the glow from Blind Light (2007), a luminous glass room filled with dense mist. From the outside, you can observe people vanish as they enter the brightly lit room and are enveloped by the mist, eventually emerging as shadows as they come close to its walls. Inside, you can lose yourself in light and vapour, with visibility down to as little as two feet.