Image: Antony Gormley: Time Horizon
1. Antony Gormley, Time Horizon, 2006 at Houghton Hall. Photograph by Pete Huggins
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Antony Gormley: Time Horizon Apollo's Art Diary

2 August 2024
Antony Gormley’s Time Horizon (2006) – one of his largest and most dramatic installations to date – can be seen in the UK for the first time, at Houghton Hall in Norfolk (until 31 October). The work was first displayed in 2006 in the olive groves and ruins of an Italian archaeological park; here it appears in the landscaped gardens of an English country house. A hundred life-sized nude figures have been planted across some 300 acres; each figure is placed at the same height regardless of ground level, meaning that some are buried as deep as their forehead while others stand raised on columns several metres high. One, in the house, is buried up to its waist in a flagstone floor. Gormley’s trademark cast-iron figures are, as ever, modelled on the artist himself.
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