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York woodworkers to recreate Gorky's rocking horse for Tate Modern

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  • York woodworkers to recreate Gorky's rocking horse for Tate Modern

    The Press, York, UK
    March 26 2010

    York woodworkers to recreate Arshile Gorky's rocking horse for Tate Modern

    12:50pm Friday 26th March 2010

    By Charles Hutchinson »


    Tate Modern has commissioned York woodcarver Iain Broadbent and
    furniture maker John Watts to recreate a rocking horse made by Arshile
    Gorky, whose retrospective exhibition will run at London gallery until
    May 3.

    Gorky, alongside Rothko, Pollock and de Kooning, was one of the most
    powerful American painters of the 20th century and a seminal figure in
    the formation of Abstract Expressionism.

    Although best known for his paintings, he was a skilled carpenter too,
    having been taught by his uncle in his native Armenia, and he created
    the rocking horse for his daughter, Maro, in 1943.

    The original is now fragile, so much so that it was too delicate to be
    relocated to Iain and John's studio. Instead they had to make their
    copy by working from templates, photographs and detailed measurements
    to replicate Gorky's original method.

    Iain has worked on many woodcarving and restoration projects around
    Britain, and multiple examples of his work can be found on the streets
    of York, for example the carved Merchant Adventurers sign on Fossgate
    and the restoration of the coat of arms above the Jigsaw shop on
    Stonegate.

    John creates traditional and contemporary furniture for private and
    corporate clients nationwide, and his past commissions in York include
    a desk for the Merchant Adventurers' Hall and a display cabinet for
    the Land Registry in James Street.

    Both artists will be taking part in the 2010 York Open Studios from
    April 16 to 18, when 55 artists will open their doors to show how and
    where they work. For more details, visit yorkopenstudios.co.uk

    ¢ Arshile Gorky's retrospective at Tate Modern includes paintings and
    drawings from across his career and a handful of rarely seen
    sculptures. Born in Armenia, he arrived in the USA in 1920 after
    fleeing from persecution in his home country and adopted the name
    Arshile Gorky with reference to the Russian writer Maxim Gorky.

    http://www.yorkpress.co.uk/leisure/exhibit ions/5086400.York_woodworkers_to_recreate_Arshile_ Gorky___s_rocking_horse_for_Tate_Modern/
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