Assembly

Assembly is a series of figurative sculptures sited in the historic Royal Arsenal site, once the home of a major munitions factory. Now the site of a major regeneration project that has transformed the space into a cultural hub, the sculpture celebrates the industrial materials of the munitions works, and the figures pay homage to the workers and their families that lived and worked on site.

Burke sought to depict a collective human presence with a series of defined spaces. Sixteen partial body moulds have been arranged as if coming together with the tightest concentration of figures in the middle of the group. The material and forms draw on the artist’s early involvement with engineering practice, and an appreciation of the aesthetic properties of functional engineering construction.

The cast forms have been designed to be industrially produced and repeated to reflect the use of industrial production methods and are bolted together using the convention for the joining of castings. Each figure is suggested by three out of the possible four assembled mould sections of a body cast, allowing the viewer visual entry and an opportunity to perceive it from the outside in, as if casting one's own body.

Assembly acknowledges that there is a tension between the reading of an image of the human form and the affect that the physicality of materials and process have on that understanding. The work was conceived as an assembly of persons, of parts, and spaces, which can finally be assembled by the viewer.

Year

2005

Client

London Development Agency

Artists

Peter Burke

Location

London

Service

Public Art Curation & Commissioning

Sector

Public Realm

Type

Sculpture