Got a
positive response from the city of Sunderland’s people as where it floated in
the river wear created an interesting introspective as there are many view
points to this work which give the public a different background on which the
work is displayed as it is underneath the Wearmouth bridge so can be seen from
the river with the city as a background or from the bridge looking out to sea.
The city
originally requested a monument to their past but instead got a glimpse of the
future with this ship-shape abstract work by Alison Wilding, a reminder that
the world progresses constantly and its identity with it, as this piece makes
the city feel like a work of art as its reflected back on its self.
The BBC had
an interview with Alison wilding on the 25th may 1988 where she goes
into detail about the struggle she has when creating her works and what is
important for her to portray to the public through the sculptures that she
creates.
Pure
sculpture, it’s the start of the art, as its uses intuitive materials which are
freeing to form allowing the artist to have an interaction with the materials
which then relate in the final piece which then the audience can also see the
interaction. Alison Wilding has an emotional response to her work with the
materials she uses and the shapes she creates, she believes that her life
nourishes her work, so her personal relationships affect the outcome of her
sculptures.
Although she
admits that she has trouble working, gets stuck like a fly in a spiders web,
and can stare at the work for hours before she sees how to move it forward but
this is the way she work she has to really look at a sculpture so she will know
how other people will view it as you can often be your hardest critic so only
you will know when a work is at completion.