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Facing Fear is the first time the sculptures of Lynn Chadwick and
Alberto Giacometti have ever been explicitly compared and
contrasted. In 1956, Lynn Chadwick (1914-2003) won the
International Sculpture Prize at the Venice Biennale. The youngest
artist ever to receive the prize, this British sculptor had begun
his career only six years earlier. The runners-up included Alberto
Giacometti (1901-1966), who was then already a renowned artist and
the overwhelming favourite to win. Yet the question of which one
received the prize - Giacometti won shortly afterwards, in 1962 -
is less significant than the fact that both of them were nominated
for it. Each of the two represented, in his own way, the confusion
and disillusionment that prevailed in Cold War Europe. For
Giacometti, these tensions set off a deep existential crisis that
led to a radical shift in his work. His string-like forms, now well
known, literally pare down the human being to his essence. In that
same period, Chadwick's constructivist figures were described as
'the geometry of fear', a desperate cry expressing the sense of
menace that had the artist and his contemporaries in a
stranglehold. Text in English and Dutch.
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