The large-scale sculptures of the British artist Phyllida Barlow (born
1944) eschew serenity, balance and beauty in favor of instability,
obstruction and oddness. They invade the spaces they inhabit, instead of
neatly complementing them. Her use of inexpensive everyday
materials--concrete, plywood, cardboard, plaster, fabric and
paint--suggests that her works are a double act of recycling: both of
the materials she uses and the images she draws from her memory. With
installation shots of the artist's new works at the Royal Academy,
London, and photography in the studio, the book's introduction situates
Barlow as a key figure within contemporary sculpture. An interview
between the artist and the show's curator, Edith Devaney, examines the
new work in the exhibition.