Keith Wilsons latest artwork revealed at the University of Leeds
Sunday 05 October 2014
After leaving the Slade in the late 1980s, Keith Wilson worked for a year with deaf-blind adults as art instructor. Drawing two spaced fingertips in a wave motion across the forehead of a student, a tactile 'brainwave' sign announced the arrival of the artist, the subject of art, and the imminent activity of making art. This modification of the British Sign Language sign struck home, and stayed with Keith. He says: 'The sign seemed to contain Art's three basic frames, but mainly because it seemed to directly communicate art's truest form. It seemed to be itself an artwork.'
The sculpture is made of black polyurethane elastomer – giving a dramatic, rippled effect to its surface.
The proximity of the sculpture and the newly refurbished Beech Grove Plaza to the refurbished Social Sciences building means this area of the University of Leeds campus is now much more welcoming and accessible, providing a space where people can meet, relax or simply pass through and enjoy.