Lot Essay
‘I want people to stand there and think ‘This is a sculpture, how do I get involved with this sculpture?’ I want objects to stand there just like they should be there, like they have actually earned their place. So that it’s a self-understood thing that they are there and that they have a particular visual quality. They’re there and they want a dialogue on the basis of all the other things that are in the world, and not on the basis of a particular group of objects which one has called, in the past, ‘sculpture’. That’s a fundamental tenet of my approach to making sculpture. So one has to be very aware of formal qualities. For me a sculpture will only work if its form is right’
(T. Cragg, quoted in L. Cooke, Tony Cragg, exh. cat., Hayward Gallery London, 1987, p.14).
(T. Cragg, quoted in L. Cooke, Tony Cragg, exh. cat., Hayward Gallery London, 1987, p.14).