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Keir Smith compares using steel to bronze

Keir Smith compares using steel to bronze Artists’ Lives extract

Audio description for Keir Smith compares using steel to bronze

Transcript

Anna Dyke: How do you feel about using steel as opposed to bronze?

Keir Smith: Well there’s not much I can do with it. I mean all I can do is kind of draw up plans and send it away to the laser cutters and then I have to send it away to someone to assemble it. There’s not a great deal I can do.

I mean bronze I can be involved in it at every stage and I know if I make a mistake I can go back and do something with it so, but there is something about the absolute kind of cruelty of the hardness of the steel which I really like, and I mean I’m not entirely sure if – I don’t have any plans to use it in the future, but there’s something about the sheer kind of geometricising precision I can get with it which is still compelling.

About Artists’ Lives

This is a transcript of part of an interview from National Life Stories’ project Artists’ Lives:

Keir Smith, interviewed by Anna Dyke, for the National Life Stories project Artists’ Lives, 2006 © British Library Board, reference C466/230. Extract from Track 24, Starts: 17:32

For information about National Life Stories and how to access the full recordings, please contact oralhistory@bl.uk or visit .

Exhibition

Find out more about Some Steel: Sculpture and Steel in Britain, 1960-90, which traces the relationship between sculpture and steel over a period of thirty years, from display in the gallery to post-industrial, artist-run spaces.

Some Steel: Sculpture and Steel in Britain, 1960-90
A model poses with their face poking through a large steel sculpture - a big circle of white metal with a smaller oval hole in the middle.

Exhibition

Some Steel: Sculpture and Steel in Britain, 1960-90

Give What You Can

Archive Gallery
Leeds Art Gallery, UK

More Artists’ Lives extracts

Listen to more of the series that accompanies the exhibition.