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The Great Women Artists

Rachel Whiteread

The Great Women Artists

Katy Hessel

Arts

4.8 • 877 Ratings

🗓️ 24 October 2023

⏱️ 39 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

I am so excited to say that my guest on the GWA Podcast is one of the most pioneering artists alive today, Rachel Whiteread. Working across sculpture and drawing, in mediums ranging from concrete to resin, and in scales that go from miniscule to colossal – from casting domestic hot water bottles to entire immersive libraries – Whiteread is hailed for her poetic, stoic works that draw so intimately on our human experiences. Discussing how her work gives, in her words “authority to forgotten things” Whiteread’s sculptures of the past three decades have not only made me rethink sculpture as a form and medium, but they have provided incredible commentary on the changes that have occurred – from the rapidly gentrifying London, the state of political change in 1990s and 2000s Britain, as well as imparting on us a reflection of impermanence and loss. As someone born in the 90s, I grew up with Whiteread’s work. Her sculptures were some of the first I ever saw and knew of as a kid and no matter what age we are, one can’t help but be utterly stunned and fascinated by them. Famous for casting familiar objects and settings, from houses to the underneath of a chair, baths to doors, Whiteread takes elements we use in our everyday life, transforms them into ghostly replicas, and ultimately makes us rethink their purpose, practical use, and the memory that these objects once held. Raised in London to an artist mother and geography teacher father, who encouraged her to scavenge found objects and “look up” wherever she went, Whiteread studied at Brighton Polytechnic and sculpture, with the late and great Phyllida Barlow, at the Slade School of Fine Art in the 1980s. Her first solo exhibition in 1988, included her first series of cast objects, and in the early 1990s she made headlines with her sculpture House, a monumental, to-scale concrete cast of the inside of a three-storey townhouse. She has since taken over the Tate Modern’s Turbine Hall, London’s Fourth Plinth, created an extraordinary Holocaust Memorial in Vienna that resembles the shelves of a library with the pages turned outwards, has had major exhibitions and retrospectives all over the world and is still continuing to push forth all boundaries of sculpture in the most exciting and impactful ways. THIS EPISODE IS GENEROUSLY SUPPORTED BY THE LEVETT COLLECTION: https://www.instagram.com/famm.mougins // https://www.merrellpublishers.com/9781858947037 ENJOY!!! Follow us: Katy Hessel: @thegreatwomenartists / @katy.hessel Sound editing by Nada Smiljanic Music by Ben Wetherfield https://www.thegreatwomenartists.com/

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hello everyone and welcome back to series 10 of the Great Women Artists podcast. It's great to have

0:06.1

you back and do we have an exciting series for you? But just before we get to this, I am delighted to say

0:12.2

that this series is supported by the Levit Collection, a collection built around supporting women

0:17.4

artists from abstract expressionist greats, from Lee Krasner to Joan Mitchell,

0:21.8

to contemporary artists working today. Earlier this year, the Levit Collection supported the

0:26.8

publication of a major book, Abstract Expressionists, The Women, published by Morel, which

0:32.2

surveys the vital role of women in the development of the movement, from those working in New York

0:36.7

City to San Francisco in the mid-20th century. This beautiful book presents the development of the movement, from those working in New York City to San Francisco

0:37.8

in the mid-20th century. This beautiful book presents the works of the Levit Collection, alongside

0:43.0

richly illustrated essays by scholars Ellen G. Landau and Joan M. Marta. For more information,

0:49.7

I have linked to the book in the episode's show notes and I hope you enjoy this episode.

1:03.6

Hello everyone and welcome to The Great Women Artist podcast with me, Katie Hessel.

1:08.5

Some of you might know me from The Great Women Artists, an Instagram account I set up in October, which celebrates female artists on a daily basis,

1:13.1

ranging from young graduates to old masters.

1:16.4

Well, in a similar fashion to the Instagram, this podcast is all about celebrating female artists

1:21.9

from a variety of backgrounds and histories.

1:24.8

And I am so excited to be interviewing artists on their career or artists,

1:29.2

writers, curators or general art lovers on the women artist who means most of them.

1:34.2

What I want this podcast to do is celebrate female artists in all different capacities so you,

1:39.7

the listener, can gain a look into the greatest female artists working now or from art history.

1:48.4

I am so excited to say that my guest on the Great Women Artist podcast is one of the most pioneering artists alive today, Rachel White-Reed.

1:57.6

Working across sculpture and drawing, in mediums ranging from concrete to resin,

...

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