From 26th June 2021 to January 3rd 2022 Hauser & Wirth Somerset presented Eduardo Chillida. During the exhibition Aloys was involved as part of a Curatorial Placement. Working within the gallery's education team Aloys facilitated tour groups, school visits and wrote educational resources such as Teacher's Notes. Scroll down to learn more about the exhibition.
One of the foremost Spanish sculptors of the twentieth century, Eduardo Chillida (1924 – 2002) is widely celebrated for his monumental public sculptures and enduring fascination with interconnected shape, space and organic form. Chillida challenged the constraints of materials such as iron and steel to redefine the language of postwar sculpture, drawing on a deep connection to his native Basque region. Chillida’s public sculptures were commissioned globally and he travelled extensively to Paris, Greece, Umbria, Tuscany, Rome and Provence, each informing new artistic paths.
From June 2021 to January 2022 Hauser and Wirth Somerset presented a significant body of sculptural works and drawings displayed throughout the original farm buildings and surrounding outdoor landscape in Somerset. The exhibition invited new encounters between Chillida’s work and the unique environment of Hauser & Wirth Somerset, drawing parallels with the artist’s own vision for Chillida Leku, a public museum and sculpture park created during his lifetime that expanded the relationship between art and nature. Large and medium-sized sculptures of granite, chamotte clay and iron, were presented throughout the Threshing Barn, Pigsty and Workshop galleries. The sculptural works were complemented by a selection of paper works, including suspended Gravitations and figurative drawings verging on abstraction.
Hauser & Wirth supported the reopening of Chillida Leku in 2019 in order to share the artist’s life and practice with wider audiences, working closely with Chillida’s family and the local community to preserve the artist’s legacy. This will be the first cultural exchange project of its kind with the museum and the gallery in the UK, including a collaborative education and events programme over an extended six-month period.