Tony Cragg’s most recent bodies of work showcase his latest formal developments, shedding light on the artist’s unrelenting search for new material forms. Cragg’s unique sculptural language crystallises his ‘raw, naked responses [...] to the primary material sources that are deeper than just the surface appearance of things and create forms that express our lives and our essential humanity.’ Through his abstract polymorphic sculptures, Cragg strives to kindle ineffable reactions in the beholder.
Artworks gain significance exactly because they offer an experience and experiment that involved going ex-, beyond the perimeter of our practicable, known and describable existences, where the signs have not yet been formulated into symbols and there is no descriptive vocabulary: they knock on the door not only of the unknown but of the unknowable. — Tony Cragg
In his recent series of Incidents, Cragg harnesses the expressive possibilities of the steel medium to create eminently futuristic sculptures. The svelte works stand upright, their curvaceous yet strikingly spare forms jutting upwards, seeming to defy gravity. Creating a stark contrast between positive and negative space, these towering works heighten the viewer’s sense of spatiality. The reflective nature of the stainless steel in Incident (2023) further interacts with the space, reflecting and at times deforming the work’s surroundings.
Masks (2023) depicts two inextricably linked forms that oscillate between humanoid figures and geological formations, blurring the boundaries between body and landscape. The work is reminiscent of Constantin Brâncuși’s Kiss (1916; Philadelphia Museum of Art) in which two embracing figures merge into a single form. In Cragg’s sculpture, the outline of both profiles emerges and recedes, resolving from certain viewpoints, before dissolving back into abstraction.
Masks, 2023
Bogoak, 298kg
140 x 111 x 55cm (55.12 x 43.7 x 21.65 in)
The Kiss, 1907–8
Philadelphia Museum of Art
This work from 2023 epitomises Tony Cragg’s ability to create entirely unprecedented forms that nevertheless spark a sense of recognition as they gesture to the world around us. The compellingly enigmatic, figmental sculpture is adorned with holes and short tentacle-like appendages, which lend it the appearance of a live sea creature or a tendrilled plant. The biomorphic sculpture exudes a sense of metamorphosis and growth, as though it were suspending a moment of flux. As Jon Wood notes, Cragg’s works ‘remind us that all is ultimately moving, seething and active in the world and that nothing is really static.’
Untitled, 2023Bronze, 120kg
100 x 53 x 82 cm (39.37 x 20.87 x32.28 in)
Off the Mountain, 2023
Stone (nero portoro), 460 kg
90 x 65 x 69 cm (35.43 x 25.59 x 27.17 in)