
Large Leaping Hare (Primary Title)
Barry Flanagan, Welsh, 1941 - 2009 (Artist)
"If you consider what conveys situation and meaning and feeling in a human figure, the range of expression is in fact far more limited than the device of investing an animal - a hare especially - with the expressive attributes of a human being." Barry Flanagan
Flanagan's cavorting hare, a continuing subject he began making in the early 1980s, combines humor and sophistication with a poke in the ribs. Flanagan started his career in the 1960s by rejecting prevailing formalist tastes for welded-steel sculpture. He experimented instead with limp lengths of rope, unfinished wooden poles, and soft cloth forms filled with sand or plaster - informal, impermanent, organic anti-objects that tested the limits of sculpture.
Flanagan returned to traditional sculptural materials - stone in the 1970s and bronze in the early 1980s - but not to traditional practices. One of the first figures he made when he began casting in bronze, Flanagan's hare was a witty iconoclast effort to deflate avant-garde orthodoxy and academism. Gilding ennobles the slender leaping creature, as does his perch atop a Minimalist pyramid of crossed steel battens.
Some object records are not complete and do not reflect VMFA's full and current knowledge. VMFA makes routine updates as records are reviewed and enhanced.