‘You are what you do’:The life and sculpture of Elisabeth Frink

‘You are what you do’:The life and sculpture of Elisabeth Frink

By The Salisbury Museum

by Wilfrid Wright

Date and time

Location

The Salisbury Museum

65 The Close Salisbury SP1 2EN United Kingdom

Good to know

Highlights

  • 1 hour, 30 minutes
  • In person

Refund Policy

Refunds up to 7 days before event

About this event

Dame Elisabeth Frink CH DBE RA (1930–1993) was one of the most prominent British sculptors of the late twentieth century. In a prolific career spanning more than 40 years, she completed dozens of public commissions and had works acquired by major institutions around the globe. However, despite her enormous success and popularity with the public, Frink never felt fully understood by the art world, and it is arguably only in the 30 years following her death in 1993 that Frink’s important place in art history has been recognised. This talk examines some of the core themes and images which run throughout Frink’s oeuvre, discussing the artist’s influences, unique working practices, and art historical context through key sculptures and episodes from her extraordinary life.

Wilfrid Wright is an art historian and curator specialising in modern and contemporary British art and visual culture. He studied History of Art at the University of Warwick (BA, 2022) and the Courtauld Institute of Art (MA, 2023), where his research focused largely on 20th century British sculpture in an international context and, in particular, the work of Elisabeth Frink. He has contributed to various publications, including Elisabeth Frink: A View From Within (Dorset Museum, 2023).

Organized by

The Salisbury Museum tells the story of Salisbury and its surrounding areas - a unique landscape which has been a cradle of continuous human achievement for over half a million years.

The museum uses the extraordinary breadth of its collections, exhibitions and events - including prehistoric material from Stonehenge and South Wiltshire; the Pitt Rivers’ Wessex collection; and a fine medieval collection with finds from Old Sarum, Clarendon Palace and the city itself - to bring to life the narrative of this landscape, and of the people who shaped it and have been inspired by it for over 500,000 years.

Based in the King’s House, a grade I listed building located opposite Salisbury Cathedral, the museum building formerly housed a teacher training college and was the inspiration for an episode in Thomas Hardy’s novel Jude the Obscure.

£12 – £15
Sep 18 · 7:30 PM GMT+1