Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Twenty Four Hours (sculpture)

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Year
  
1960

Type
  
Sculpture

Subject
  
Abstract

Created
  
1960

Catalogue
  
T01987

Medium
  
Steel

Artist
  
Owner
  
Twenty Four Hours (sculpture) httpssmediacacheak0pinimgcomoriginalsb0

Dimensions
  
83.8 cm × 138.4 cm × 223.5 cm (33.0 in × 54.5 in × 88.0 in)

Similar
  
Emma Dipper, Head no 2, Draped Seated Woman 1, Sky Mirror, Statue of Nelson Mandela

Twenty Four Hours is a 1960 painted steel sculpture by Sir Anthony Caro, located in Tate Britain, central London, England. It was purchased by Tate in 1975.

The sculpture is important in the history of British sculpture since it is Caro’s first abstract sculpture and his first welded sculpture. It was previously owned by the American art critic Clement Greenberg, who Caro meet, although with abstract painters such as Kenneth Noland, during a visit to the United States in 1959. The sculpture is constructed out of found pieces of steel.

This sculpture was previous exhibited at the Whitechapel Art Gallery (September–October 1963), UCLA Art Galleries (Los Angeles, 1963), Washington Gallery of Modern Art (February–March 1965), and the Hayward Gallery (January–March 1969).

References

Twenty Four Hours (sculpture) Wikipedia