Lines of Beauty

The Foundling Museum, 40 Brunswick Square, London
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Event has ended
This event ended on Sunday 6th of September 2015
Admission
Adult Museum Admission: £7.50
Concessionary Museum Admission: £5.00
Venue Information
The Foundling Museum
40 Brunswick Square, WC1N 1AZ
Nearest Tube/Rail Stations
Russell Square 0.20 miles

This exhibition investigates the rich tradition of decorative plasterwork, from the Rococo splendour of the Foundling Hospital Court Room, now one of the highlights of the Foundling Museum, to the contemporary designs of master craftsman Geoffrey Preston.

Hand modelled stucco flowers by Geoffrey Preston

From small, beautifully-modelled relief panels to the Museum’s exuberant Rococo ceiling, Lines of Beauty casts a contemporary gaze upon the creation and preservation of the Foundling Museum’s exquisite interiors, alongside Preston’s own work in the Rococo style.

One of the UK’s leading architectural sculptors, and a specialist in decorative plasterwork, Preston led the team responsible for the pioneering restoration of the eighteenth-century hand-modelled stucco ceilings at Uppark House in West Sussex, which were destroyed by fire in 1989. This experience led him to re-examine the language of eighteenth-century form and to incorporate it in his own original work.

Lines of Beauty illuminates the art of modelling in clay through objects and photographs of some of Geoffrey’s principal commissions, including the award-winning Great Fulford in Devon, and recent work which is exhibited for the first time. New, large-scale works showcase the potential of these expressive materials while demonstrating how the Rococo style is guided fundamentally by proportion and geometry.

Drawings and models illustrate the creative process from initial sketch to completed work. Different materials and techniques are explained, from traditional stucco to modern moulding and casting methods, alongside a display of the artist’s tools and materials.

The exhibition also highlights the restoration of the Foundling Hospital Court Room and its stunning plasterwork, which was donated to the Hospital by Georgian craftsman and entrepreneur William Wilton in the 1740s. The plasterwork, furniture and furnishings were saved when the Foundling Hospital building was demolished in the 1920s, before being painstakingly restored in their current site at the Museum.

Tags: Exhibition

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