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Key facts about Barbara Hepworth and her art

Barbara Hepworth is standing by one of her sculptures

Barbara Hepworth was born in 1903, in Wakefield, West Yorkshire. She died in 1975.

She was a British artist most famous for her .

Her sculptures are . They usually have smooth shapes and curved lines.

She loved nature and was inspired by the shapes and lines that she saw in it, such as hills and pebbles from the beach.

Barbara Hepworth is standing by one of her sculptures
Image caption,
Barbara Hepworth working on her sculpture, Contrapuntal Forms, in 1951. Image: Barbara Hepworth 漏 Bowness.

Hepworth's sculptures have different on them.

She used materials like wood, stone and and often added strings to her sculptures. Hepworth said "the strings were the tension I felt between myself and the sea, the wind or the hills."

Many of Barbara's sculptures are outside in nature and in public places such as parks. Her sculptures often have holes in them so that you can look at the nature on the other side through them.

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Watch: Barbara Hepworth - the sculptor

Find out about the life and work of Barbara Hepworth

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What materials did Barbara Hepworth use?

Take a look at some of the materials Barbara Hepworth used to make her sculptures.

A cartoon grey stone.
Image caption,
Stone
A cartoon piece of brown wood.
Image caption,
Wood
Cartoon sheets of metal.
Image caption,
Bronze
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Barbara Hepworth's factfile

Details on Hepworth's date and place of birth, her type of art and what she's known for
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Barbara Hepworth and her work

Image gallerySkip image gallerySlide 1 of 6, A gallery display of one of Barbara's wooden sculptures called 'Fugue', 'Fugue' (1956) This sculpture is made out of wood. You can see the natural lines of the tree. Barbara filled the hole with tightly pulled strings. The hole lets light through and also creates a shadow inside the sculpture. This sculpture is on display in The Fitzwilliam Museum, in Cambridge, England, instead of outdoors. Image: Barbara Hepworth 漏 Bowness.
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Activity

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Activity

Make your own sculpture

Four pieces of clay moulded into different shapes.

You don't have to use wood or bronze to make your own sculpture. Why not try to make one with soft dough or modelling clay ?

It doesn鈥檛 have to look like anything in particular. It can be abstract like Barbara Hepworth鈥檚 sculptures.

Try and make:

  • a 3D circle (a sphere)
  • a 3D triangle (a pyramid)
  • a 3D square (a cube)

You could even add a spy hole in your sculpture like Barbara Hepworth did.

Four pieces of clay moulded into different shapes.
A child moulding some pink and red clay.

Try using your hands and fingers in different ways to make your sculpture.

  • You could make some parts of your sculpture feel smooth and some of it feel rough or bumpy.

  • Use your fingers to poke holes through the middle of your sculpture.

  • Try rolling the dough or clay back and forward using all of your fingers, to make a cylinder or sausage shape.

  • See if you can join two different sculptures together to make a new one.

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Image caption,
Barbara Hepworth's studio in St Ives, Cornwall

Did you know?

  • Barbara Hepworth made around 600 sculptures in her lifetime.
  • Some of her sculptures are so tall that she had to climb a ladder to make them.
  • Barbara lived and worked in St Ives, Cornwall for a lot of her life.
  • The house she lived in is now a museum about her life and work. Many of her unfinished works and the tools she used to make them are still there.
  • Barbara Hepworth was inspired by landscape and nature from an early age, especially after going on long car journeys with her father. She said "hills were sculptures" and "the roads defined the forms".
Image caption,
Barbara Hepworth's studio in St Ives, Cornwall
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Quiz

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Barbara Hepworth's rounded sculpture with two holes

Glossary

Here are the meanings of some important words.

Abstract - Art that doesn't represent reality, but uses shapes, colours and textures for effect.
Bronze - A type of metal.
Sculpture - A type of art that is three-dimensional or not flat.
Texture - How something feels when you touch it.

Barbara Hepworth's rounded sculpture with two holes
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