Anthony Caro (m. 1942) is a key figure in British sculpture. He came to public attention with a show at the Whitechapel Gallery in 1963, where he exhibited large abstract works which marked a radical departure from the way sculpture had hitherto been seen. It was an attempt, as Caro put it, 'to make sculpture more real'.
He was born in 1924 in
Caro often works in steel, but also in a range of other materials, including bronze, silver, lead, stoneware, wood and paper. The sculptures that attracted so much attention in 1963 were mostly large abstracts, brightly painted and standing directly on the ground rather than on plinths or pedestals. Christ’s has three of his sculptures in collection: The Deposition (1999/2000), Table Piece Y-79 (1986/1987), and Bronze Screen ‘Gambol’ (1981), located in the Chapel, outside the library and in Z building.
Major exhibitions of Anthony’s work include retrospectives at the
Writing in 1964, New York art critic Clement Greenberg said of his work, "Without maintaining necessarily that he is a better artist than Turner, I would venture to say that Caro comes closer to the genuine grand manner – genuine because original and un-synthetic – than any English artist before him."