Peter Hide talks about sourcing steel for Stockwell Depot
Peter Hide talks about sourcing steel for Stockwell Depot Artists’ Lives extract
Transcript
Peter Hide: Well we actually had quite a lot of steel and we would go sometimes, you know, Tony [Anthony Caro] and we’d all, we’d exchange information about where steel could be found and this and that and we would go up to Durham sometimes to Consett to the old steel mill there, you know, which was, had fantastic pieces of sheared off steel and end rollings like pastry cut. You know when you, with a rolling pin, you roll pastry, and the ends, the edges of the pastry are very interesting well that happens in steel especially in an old-fashioned mill.
Tony discovered those, they were fantastic. But I discovered these sheared off bits of plate which had soft edge rather like a skirting board around the house and I use them sometimes.
In those days, modern steel production, there were lots of old mills in England that were not very profitable I think, you know, but they were still going and so you could get a fantastic selection of stuff I don’t think there was a lot of difference.
About Artists’ Lives
This is a transcript of part of an interview from National Life Stories’ project Artists’ Lives:
Peter Hide, interviewed by Cathy Courtney, 2013 © Peter Hide, reference C466/344. Extract from Track 10. Starts: 44:40
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.
Exhibition
Some Steel: Sculpture and Steel in Britain, 1960-90
Give What You Can
More Artists’ Lives extracts
Listen to more of the series that accompanies the exhibition.