Dalwood at Roche Court Sculpture Park

Dalwood at Roche Court Sculpture Park

Roche Court Salisbury Wiltshire, SP5 1BG, United Kingdom Thursday, September 22, 2022–Sunday, November 6, 2022

The New Art Centre is delighted to announce a small exhibition of Hubert ‘Nibs’ Dalwood’s work. The show will act as a precursor to a much larger retrospective in 2024, to coincide with the centenary of Dalwood’s birth.  

maquette for kingsdale school by hubert dalwood

Hubert Dalwood

Maquette for Kingsdale School, 1950–1980

Price on Request

monument by hubert dalwood

Hubert Dalwood

Monument, 1975

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otera relief by hubert dalwood

Hubert Dalwood

Otera Relief, 1975

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lower slopes by hubert dalwood

Hubert Dalwood

Lower Slopes, 1975

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folded relief by hubert dalwood

Hubert Dalwood

Folded Relief, 1959

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relief: bergamo by hubert dalwood

Hubert Dalwood

Relief: Bergamo, 1958

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untitled by hubert dalwood

Hubert Dalwood

Untitled, 1974–1975

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double bowl by hubert dalwood

Hubert Dalwood

Double Bowl, 1962

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ark by hubert dalwood

Hubert Dalwood

Ark, 1960

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Beginning with Relief: Bergamo from 1958, an early period in Dalwood’s career that is marked by experimentation amongst the vibrant community of Leeds College of Art as a Gregory Fellow; the exhibition also includes Ark, shown at the 1962 Venice Biennale, where he represented Britain alongside Ceri Richards and Robert Adams. Much lauded for his public commissions, Untitled, 1974-5, a work for the University of Central England, Birmingham, is shown in the Gallery, that Dalwood explains: ‘led [me] to re-examine views on the relationship between natural and man-made objects… to give an ambiguity of scale’. 

 Dalwood was one of the first artists of his generation to recognise the beauty and possibilities of using aluminium as a material for sculpture. Its colour and malleability suited his often poetic imagery and interest in landscapes. With organic, repeating shapes combined with geometric patterns, these sculptures always occupy the liminal space between landscape and anthropomorphic; figuration and abstraction.