Tuesday, November 30, 2004

The World Has Been Empty

The World Has Been Empty Since the Romans by Ian Hamilton Finlay, Tate Modern, Bankside, Southwark, London

“The World Has Been Empty Since the Romans” by Ian Hamilton Finlay, 1985
Tate Modern
Bankside, Southwark
London, September 2003

The World Has Been Empty Since the Romans 1985 is a long and extremely heavy stone sculpture that resembles the ruin of a classical frieze and hangs from a series of steel chains. The text of its title – ‘THE WORLD HAS BEEN EMPTY SINCE THE ROMANS’ – is inscribed across its front in a traditional-looking serif typeface. The sculpture is made from six pieces of Bath stone, which is a form of limestone, and the faces of the stones are quite smooth, but are marked by what look like signs of weathering. They have jagged tops, bottoms and sides and the inscribed text is often broken up by joins between the different slabs, as well as what look like missing sections of stone. There is no fixed height from which the work must be hung, so that in some exhibitions it has been presented well above head height and in others it has been suspended only a short distance from the ground. However, all of the stones are hung at the same level as each other every time it is installed.” (The World Has Been Empty Since the Romans, Tate)

No comments: