that gender is something that is made, not given, and I think we are exploring what we mean by the various textures and complexions of masculinity.

Similar documents
2. Durkheim sees sacred things as set apart, special and forbidden; profane things are seen as everyday and ordinary.

LOVE WITHOUT DUALITY. Awakening in Intimacy. B Prior

Toward An Epistemology of Peace

Happiness and the Economy

Department of Religious Studies. FALL 2016 Course Schedule

Interview. with Ravi Ravindra. Can science help us know the nature of God through his creation?

Laudato Si THE TWO GREATEST COMMANDMENTS & OUR PLANET

RE Religion and Life 2012 Exam Paper

Class XI Practical Examination

Religion, Ecology & the Future of the Human Species

World Civilizations The Global Experience, AP* Edition, 6 th Edition 2011

Sounds of Love Series SPIRITUAL EVOLUTION

PRESENTATION. For International Dialogue on Evolving a New Model of Nonviolent Lifestyle for Universal Peace and Sustainability

PART II. LEE KUAN YEW: To go back. CHARLIE ROSE: Yes. LEE KUAN YEW: Yes, of course.

Motion from the Right Relationship Monitoring Committee for the UUA Board of Trustees meeting January 2012

Sample excerpt from Transitions: Pathways to the Life and World Your Soul Desires - Page 1 of 5. An excerpt from

correlated to the North Carolina Social Studies Standard Course of Study for Africa, Asia and Australia and Skills Competency Goals

Creating the Future World on Spaceship Earth

The emergence of South Asian Civilization. September 26, 2013

AS I ENTER THINK ABOUT IT

VI. Socialism and Communism

REL 101: Introduction to Religion Callender Online Course

THE HON RICHARD MARLES MP SHADOW MINISTER FOR DEFENCE MEMBER FOR CORIO

Name: Period 4: 1450 C.E C.E.

ADDITIONAL COURSES GUIDE International & Global Affairs & Development (A&D: 198) Undergraduate Bulletin

Pride Evensong 2017 St John s Cathedral, Brisbane The Right Revd Jeremy Greaves Bishop of the Northern Region, Anglican Church SQ

MISSOURI SOCIAL STUDIES GRADE LEVEL EXPECTATIONS

WESTERN IMPERIALISM AND ISLAMIC FUNDAMENTALISM: what relation? Jamie Gough Department of Town and Regional Planning, Sheffield University

Unit 2.3 Classical Civilization of Asia. The Eastern World -- Religion and Philosophy =)

Buddhism. Ancient India and China Section 3. Preview

I Adama

Leaders and Entrepreneurs - Elizabeth Plunkett Buttimer, President of Bowden Manufacturing

NEW IDEAS IN DEVELOPMENT AFTER THE FINANCIAL CRISIS WELCOME: FRANCIS FUKUYAMA, DIRECTOR OF INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT, JOHNS HOPKINS SAIS

Sangha as Heroes. Wendy Ridley

DESCRIPTION ACADEMIC STANDARDS INSTRUCTIONAL GOALS VOCABULARY. Subject Area: History. Subject Area: Geography

THE ANDREW MARR SHOW INTERVIEW: JOSE MANUEL BARROSO PRESIDENT, EU COMMISSION FEBRUARY 16 th 2014

SCIENTIFIC THEORIES ABOUT THE ORIGINS OF THE WORLD AND HUMANITY

Refugee Worship Resources

Q & A with author David Christian and publisher Karen. This Fleeting World: A Short History of Humanity by David Christian

EU Global Strategy Conference organised by EUISS and Real Institute Elcano, Barcelona

How does Buddhism differ from Hinduism?

Adlai E. Stevenson High School Course Description

Chapter 8 Reading Guide: African Civilizations and the Spread of Islam

DEPARTMENT OF RELIGIOUS STUDIES. Add new courses:

Keynote Address by Mr. R. V. Shahi - Former Power Secretary, Government of India

WLUML "Heart and Soul" by Marieme Hélie-Lucas

DEPARTMENT OF RELIGION

Chapter 12. Cross-Cultural Exchanges on the Silk Roads. 2011, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

On Eckhart Tolle - Awakening to Your Life's Purpose

The Constitution of the Blue Planet Earth

Prentice Hall: The American Nation, Survey Edition 2003 Correlated to: Colorado Model Content Standards for History (Grades 5-8)

So You Think You Are Religious, or Spiritual But Not Religious: So What? Youth, Religion, and Identity Workshop. Reginald W. Bibby

From the ELCA s Draft Social Statement on Women and Justice

Social Theory. Universidad Carlos III, Fall 2015 COURSE OVERVIEW COURSE REQUIREMENTS

Too Many Humans!: The Imperative To Return To A Human Population Of 1 Billion By Morrison Bonpasse READ ONLINE

Introduction: Goddess and God in Our Lives

What is Peace Literacy?

Radicalization and extremism: What makes ordinary people end up in extreme situations?

JEROME NRIAGU: COMMENCEMENT SPEECH UALBERTA ( )

Nanjing Statement on Interfaith Dialogue

Isaiah s Message to America DUMBER THAN AN OX

ACCOMPANIMENT BY THE END OF THIS SESSION YOU WILL HAVE:

AMERICAN BAPTIST POLICY STATEMENT ON AFRICA

Reformation, Renaissance, and Exploration. Unit Test

Final Exam: January 23rd and January 24 th. Final Exam Review Guide. Day One: January 23rd - Subjective Final Exam

Pre-AP Global History and Geography Summer Assignment

The Accra Confession COVENANTING FOR JUSTICE IN THE ECONOMY AND THE EARTH

POLITICAL PROGRAMME OF THE OGADEN NATIONAL LIBERATION FRONT (ONLF)

Garratt Publishing Diocesan Outcomes

Istituto Lorenzo de Medici Summer Program. HIS 120 Introduction to World History. Course Outline

The Disciplining Mechanism of Power in Selected Literary Works by Albert Camus and Franz Kafka

ALLIANCE BETWEEN MONASTERIES

Station 1: Geography

Opening Remarks. Presentation by Rev. Dr Samuel Kobia General Secretary, World Council of Churches

Research (universe energy from human energy) Written by Sarab Abdulwahed Alturky

Creation Revisited Series. Creation Revisited

EL41 Mindfulness Meditation. What did the Buddha teach?

APWH Chapters 4 & 9.notebook September 11, 2015

LA VIA CAMPESINA ANNUAL REPORT MAY 2017

Civilizations of East Asia. The Influence of Neighboring Cultures on Japan

AIM: How does Buddhism influence the lives of its followers? DO NOW: How did The Buddha achieve enlightenment?

What America Is Thinking Natural Gas Exports May 2014

Lisa Suhair Majaj: In your work as a poet, editor and playwright you have grappled with

Heidi Alexander speech to Lewisham East Labour Party 01/07/2016

by scientists in social choices and in the dialogue leading to decision-making.

Were the Mongols an or?

The Last Judgment in Cyberspace

Please note I ve made some minor changes to his English to make it a smoother read KATANA]

Archaeologist: Dr. Jeffrey Rose

Indira Freitas Johnson Interview

Eton College King s Scholarship Examination 2012

Race, Poverty, & Religion NEH Buddhist East Asia Summer Institute Shereen Masoud Temple University Department of Religion June 22, 2018

Chapter 2. Early Societies in Southwest Asia and the Indo-European Migrations. 2011, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Evolution and the Mind of God

RELIGIOUS STUDIES. Time Allowed 2 hours

Running head: PAULO FREIRE'S PEDAGOGY OF THE OPPRESSED: BOOK REVIEW. Assignment 1: Paulo Freire's Pedagogy of the Oppressed: Book Review

Rational denial of undeniable climate change: Science in an era of post-truth politics

Cultural Hurdles, Religious & Spiritual Education, Countering Violent Extremism

Chapter 18 The Mongols Unify Eurasia

A Vision for Mission. 1 of 10

Transcription:

Powell, Libby. "Interview with Antony Gormley," New Internationalist, November 17, 2011. The British sculptor, whose naked form has been cast and displayed across the world, speaks to Libby Powell about masculinity, movement and the adventure of being human. You so often cast your male figure as standing straight, tall and proud in an environment where absent fathers are blamed for rioting children, and where urban life moves us further away from traditional male functions. How do you see the evolving role of the male figure in today s world? In some senses there is no figure, just a space/place where a body once was. Perhaps that body s sexuality is less important than its verticality. The bodies are male, they are gendered, but you have to take more account of where it is placed and to where it is looking. The verticality of the body against the horizontality of the horizon is critical. I m not sure if these works present an ideal of maleness or more usefully question the things that the traditional statue has stood for and indeed the whole notion of the standing of a statue. My body is a found object. I would like to think the body-surrogates I make from it are as vulnerable as they are resistant. Resistant to time but in dialogue with time. They are about feeling, about a reconciliation of the uniqueness and aloneness of every human in birth and death, while being open to everything that can happen in-between. I am trying to work in the space between the standing of a statue and the object-nature of a sculpture asking what kind of job it can do. I m interested in how we might project exactly those qualities of maleness and find them confounded. Speaking personally, I think that gender is something that is made, not given, and I think we are exploring what we mean by the various textures and complexions of masculinity. I am trying to work in the space between the standing of a statue and the object-nature of a sculpture asking what kind of job it can do. I m interested in how we might project exactly those qualities of maleness and find them confounded. Speaking personally, I think that gender is something that is made, not given, and I think we are exploring what we mean by the various textures and complexions of masculinity. As you reproduce and exhibit the human form, do you do so with a sense of pride in being human? More with a sense of asking what it is to be human and how we, as an animal, turned out this way. We are the most vertical animal, our spines have become a vertical column. When we walk we do so not with security of four limbs but by constantly recovering from falling. What do we do with our verticality? We look out towards the eyes of others of our species and the horizon. The verticality of the bodies in Another Place, Another Time, Time Horizon and Horizon Field has to be put against the opposite that is to be found in the arrested and falling bodies of Critical Mass. Critical Mass is an acknowledgement of the dark

side of human nature; an acknowledgement of the 20th century as a century in which the industrialization of killing has become commonplace and the way in which, as Foucault suggests, the public spectacle of pain has been introverted. This work is about fallout as an internalized public spectacle, the internal conditions of depression, the secrecy of Western torture and the special renditions that have characterized both the Iraq and Afghan campaigns that are in some senses the true cost of a continued Western hegemony. Critical Mass is an important critical balance to the traditional assumption that the social duty of sculpture (as the most public of the arts) is statuemaking that celebrates the structures of power and the status quo. I wish to use it to undermine, question and objectify the negative energies within the purposes of the West. Some of your work costs hundreds of thousands of pounds to create. Is there a role for such art in times of recession and austerity? This continued obsession with maintaining our world power Britain s alliance with France in the Libya campaign and the US in the Iraq wars is based on a continuation of the deployment of the latest instruments of aggression that are a result of a burgeoning arms industry. The possibility of using, often, the same materials and indeed the same industries (of ordnance and steel production) to make benign objects that investigate the collectivity and singularity of human experience seems to me utterly justifiable. Art, while feeding off the economics of its time, has to be independent of economics. Truth, value and meaning do not come from amounts of money spent, or not spent, on their production or consumption, but the intentionality of the works and what they attempt to explore or expose. Every work is an attempt to make an account of its time and place. We have now evolved from the duty of art to simply mirror a retinal image of the world to something more critical, something that moves behind the appearance of things. The work then becomes a critical tool in the balancing of life and becomes a space of exchange and interrogation of words, images and meaning. You spent time in India and Sri Lanka exploring Buddhism, and you recently created a dance for Shoalin monks. Would you consider yourself a spiritual person? I was brought up a Catholic. Anyone born into a devout Catholic family and then sent to a Benedictine monastic school has a kind of truth deficit and will have for the rest of their lives. Catholicism is a

universal system that answers all questions. I lost my faith at the age of 17, and in some sense my life ever since has been an attempt to replace Catholic truths with something more rationally sustainable. Faith has been replaced by scepticism but I have faith in the process of scepticism itself. I believe that we become most truly ourselves when placed at the threshold of the unknowable and seek to make thresholds that allow us our own vulnerability in the face of the imponderables of death and the loss of self possession. I found a spiritual discipline through meditation. I believe the mind-body instrument is an infinitely extendable tool and that the adventure of being human is far from over. I feel that sculpture, and my and others engagement with it, is an invitation to test and extend the condition of being human. The One and Other project invited members of the public to stand for an hour on the fourth plinth in London s Trafalgar Sqaure. At a time when celebrity obsession is reaching its zenith, did you take pleasure in putting normal people on a pedestal? The One and Other project was an attempt to democratize the idealized position of the statue in our culture by allowing people to represent themselves and allow their lives and beings to become a picture or a symbol for others. Obviously it worked against the background of popular contemporary cultural forms like reality and celebrity competitive television, but put those formats to a very different use. The point is that human diversity is as important as bio-diversity and we need to celebrate it. It s important to say that the selection was not to be based on what someone might perform; people were invited to use their hour in the way they saw fit and they were chosen entirely by random. Another Place, for me, had echoes of the immigrant cockle-pickers who died in the sea along the same coastline due to dangerous and illegal working conditions. In the Asian Field project, the commissioning of hundreds of local workers to manually produce tiny clay figures was interesting given the growing awareness of the concerning labour practices in factories across China and South East Asia as a manual artist, does the practices of the global labour market trouble you? Marx predicted the exploitation of labour as a concomitant follower of the exploitation of resources in the hands of those in possession of the means of production. I am concerned with revisiting industrial, agricultural and hunter-gatherer nomadic forms of life support. Another Place was based on an

examination of the ideology of immigration and the motivations that link contemporary migrants (the boat people of South East Asia, the escapees from Northern Africa seeking a home in Europe or those that leave Cuba for the coast of Florida). In an unequal world in which we accept the massive mobility of monetary instruments across borders, we seem to have difficulty in accepting the movement of living people. Both the Field projects and Another Place attempt to make an objective correlative of this process and try to question it. Both works attempt to make a place in which the unseen, unheard, faceless and voiceless are acknowledged. Going back to the Asian Field project and the creation of a new miniature population a comment on overpopulation? If so, what do you see as the best solution. It s clear that as the global population reaches 7 billion we will begin to unbalance the ability of the Earth to provide support for our species, and I think we have to have faith that human evolution is now linked to technological evolution and that bio-engineering as well as other technologies will have to come together to find new forms of harnessing renewable energy. The Western world is seeing drops in population but we simply need to be aware that the goal of a globalized humanity has to be sharing of resources and opportunities and this will never happen while rampant overpopulation continues. If we don t manage our

own demands and resource distribution then the combined pressures of famine, epidemics and increased social unrest will do their work in controlling populations, but I don t relish this kind of apocalyptic scenario. Partial extinction is often a prelude to total extinction. extinction is inevitable, eventually, but it is our decision as to how long we wish the human species to be part of the life of this planet. It s a question of whether our combined intelligences can work to discover our nature in nature or whether we, by being hard-wired into a cultural distinction from nature, end up destroying it and ourselves with it. Do you view your work as borderless, or is each piece tied to the site and the community it rests in? Very often, like Another Place or Critical Mass, the work comes out of a dialogue with a place. In the case of Another Place, that dialogue was with the immigration halls in Cuxhaven. In the case of Critical Mass, it was an examination of the Remise train depot in Vienna a place that I recognized as a meditation ground for the Holocaust and, by implication, all acts of genocide. Both of those works, while being exhibited in the spaces that gave rise to them, that were in a sense their placenta, then went on to have lives elsewhere. Rarely and most beautifully, works do come from a dialogue with a particular site and then find their place in that situation, but that is not always the case. The nomadic life of art objects as objects of exchange in many senses has also been a fate of mine. This is not ideal, but I accept it. You create very still, silent figures. Is there a place where can you be still and quiet? I m most quiet and still when travelling at speed in planes or trains and I have always found the greatest stillness when moving against wind or tide in a boat. But I have also tried to find places of quietude in the places that I live a place ideally under the rafters, close to the sky.