Cover of a book titled "Thinking is Making: Objects in Space The Mark Tanner Sculpture Award," spotlighting contemporary sculptural practice with a green textured sculpture crafted by emerging sculptors. Published by Black Dog Online.
A stack of books titled "Thinking is Making: Objects in Space The Mark Tanner Sculpture Award," featuring a green and white abstract cover design, delves into contemporary sculptural practice, making it an essential read for emerging sculptors. Published by Black Dog Online.
Stack of three green hardcover books with the top one open, revealing an image of a room under construction with tools and wires scattered, highlighting contemporary sculptural practice—Thinking is Making: Objects in Space The Mark Tanner Sculpture Award by Black Dog Online.
An open book with a green cover displays a photo of abstract art featuring pink textured forms and lines, reminiscent of contemporary sculptural practice showcased by emerging sculptors. The book is titled "Thinking is Making: Objects in Space The Mark Tanner Sculpture Award" by Black Dog Online.
An open copy of "Thinking is Making: Objects in Space The Mark Tanner Sculpture Award" by Black Dog Online with a green cover lies on a white surface. The left page contains a block of text, while the right page features two columns, likely discussing contemporary sculptural practice and emerging sculptors competing for the Mark Tanner Sculpture Award.
Open book displaying two pages of an artistic installation by emerging sculptors, featuring suspended objects, a peach-colored background, and circular focus frames. The book rests on a white surface with its green cover partially visible, showcasing **Thinking is Making: Objects in Space The Mark Tanner Sculpture Award by Black Dog Online**.
Open book displaying an artist's name, Iain Hales, and an artwork. The artwork features geometric shapes and patterns with a zigzag background and a central figure with a rectangular head, highlighting elements of contemporary sculptural practice often celebrated in "Thinking is Making: Objects in Space The Mark Tanner Sculpture Award" by Black Dog Online.
Open book displaying an article titled "Talking Sculptors," featuring a large photo of a sculpture on the left page and text on the right page. The article delves into contemporary sculptural practices and highlights emerging sculptors, including recent recipients of the Mark Tanner Sculpture Award. The book is titled "Thinking is Making: Objects in Space The Mark Tanner Sculpture Award" by Black Dog Online.
A hardcover book titled "Thinking is Making: Objects in Space The Mark Tanner Sculpture Award," featuring a green cover with a textured abstract design, showcasing the works of emerging sculptors and contemporary sculptural practice associated with Black Dog Online.

Thinking is Making: Objects in Space The Mark Tanner Sculpture Award

Sale price£22.46 Regular price£29.95
Save £7.49

Jon Wood and Michael Taylor (Contributors)

Hardback, 28 × 23 cm | 11 × 9 in, 208 pages

ISBN 978-1-912165-46-9

Availability: September, 2023

Quantity:

The Mark Tanner Sculpture Award is the most significant prize for emerging sculptors in the UK. This fully illustrated book presents the winners from the past ten years along with a variety of critical texts, including a conversation between former award judges Lisa Le Feuvre, Phyllida Barlow, Hew Locke and Mike Nelson.

The Mark Tanner Sculpture Award (MTSA) marks its 20th anniversary in 2023, having established itself as the most significant prize for emerging sculptors in the UK over the past two decades.

Thinking is Making: Objects in a Space, the second volume in the MTSA series, is a fully illustrated book that brings together a variety of texts to appraise the MTSA in the broader context of contemporary sculptural practice, with a particular focus on the role of the object and its maker.

The book’s introduction, written by MTSA co-founder and Standpoint Studios director Michael Taylor, narrates the award’s origins and development, and explores its connection to Standpoint. Central to both the award and the studios is their support for the careers of emerging artists and how the very idea of “making” has become a pivotal point of reference.

An in-depth essay by art historian and curator Dr Jon Wood explores the diverse field of sculpture-making in Britain today and considers how sculpture distinguishes itself from the world of other objects.

In addition, the book includes an illustrated conversation between the award’s winners of the past 10 years – Lee Holden, Rosie Edwards, Dean Kenning, Olivia Bax, Anna Reading, Frances Richardson, Beth Collar, Megan Broadmeadow, Kate Lyddon and Iain Hales – providing an insight into their diverse sculptural practices, their development as artists, and what they define as the space within which they operate as sculptors.

It also features a roundtable discussion between internationally renowned former MTSA guest judges Lisa Le Feuvre, Phyllida Barlow, Hew Locke and Mike Nelson. These leading figures of the contemporary sculpture scene discuss issues facing sculptors today and speculate on the future of the MTSA as it moves into its third decade.

Thinking is Making: Objects in a Space presents an overview of the contemporary British sculpture scene and will appeal not only to sculpture lovers and the many avid followers of the MTSA, but also to those interested in the wider cultural scene and in innovative practices in the field of contemporary sculpture.