Sir Eduardo Paolozzi

London to Paris (wooden maquette)

2006

wood
8.5 x 19 x 6 cm
edition of 15

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Description

'Every year between the ages of nine and fifteen, I'd go from Edinburgh to Milan, changing trains in London then in Paris. I'd always loved drawing engines, usually copying cigarette cards our shop's customers gave me.' This comment by Sir Eduardo Paolozzi gives a flavour of the sort of childhood memories that may have contributed to his vision as an artist. The idea of a mobile sculpture is compelling, and the fact that this piece is actually engineered to fit on railway lines indicates that it might well be displayed in a siding in Euston or Newcastle, or in Leith, Paolozzi's home town.

This flat wagon is piled high with sculptural fragments of a dismembered figure - massive hands, head and feet are typical images from the store of Paolozzi's mechanistic figures, which are here with other items in organised chaos. In an article in The Times magazine Paolozzi is reported as saying, "even if you don't like sculpture you might see something like this parked in a siding of a railway... People might see it on the way to work, and because this is figurative, people will recognise that it's not the usual load. If it's put in a railway siding, it's stuck under your nose for the ordinary commuter who might not go to sculpture parks - they can't miss it. It's a way of making sculpture more accessible.' Sir Eduardo Paolozzi is renowned for combining unlikely components, even opposites, in his work.

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Sir Eduardo Paolozzi
Sir Eduardo Paolozzi
Sir Eduardo Paolozzi
Sir Eduardo Paolozzi

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