Michael Bolus Explained

Michael Bolus
Birth Date:1934
Birth Place:Cape Town, South Africa
Death Date:2013
Death Place:London, United Kingdom
Nationality:South African
Known For:Sculpture
Training:Saint Martin's School of Art
Movement:Modern art

Born in South Africa, Michael Edward Bolus was an artist and teacher who settled in England in 1957 and studied at St Martin's School of Art from 1958 to 1962, studying under Anthony Caro. After a brief period living in Cape Town he returned to London in 1964 to begin a teaching post at St Martin's and the Central School of Art and Design. Bolus had his first UK solo exhibition at Waddington Galleries in 1968, which has exhibited a number of his sculptures since then.[1]

As a student his earliest work was modelled or sculpted in stone, but Bolus soon abandoned these traditional techniques in favour of working with steel and aluminium, materials that allowed him to explore the notions of balance and the extension of form which had long interested him. For the New Generation show in 1965 he exhibited a series of polychromatic sculptures taking the form of abstract shapes cut out of sheet aluminium, placed flat on the ground or stood on edge.[2] A good example of this group of works is, Bowbend, 1964.

In 1966 Bolus took part in the "Primary Structures" exhibition at the Jewish museum in New York.[3] [4] The same year he was given his first one-man show in America at the Kornblee Gallery.[5] In the 1970s his sculpture left the ground, becoming more fragmented and making use of lattice and grid-like constructions that defy gravity, such as Sculpture No. 3, 1973 and Untitled, 1984.

Bolus was part of a generation of sculptors inspired by the constructivist work made by Julio González and Pablo Picasso and continued by David Smith and Anthony Caro. The work of these sculptors rejected the plinth and asserted the work as part of the world rather than separate from it. He studied with David Annesley, Tim Scott, William G. Tucker, Phillip King and Isaac Witkin. These Sculptors first attracted widespread attention at the New Generation exhibition in London's Whitechapel gallery in 1965.[6] [7]

Bolus worked as an assistant to Anthony Caro throughout his career and was regarded highly for his ability to manipulate difficult materials such as Gold and Silver[8]

Selected exhibitions

Group exhibitions

One Man Exhibitions

Collections

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Fried, Michael. Michael Fried

    . Michael Fried. Art and Objecthood: Essays and Reviews. https://books.google.com/books?id=RxwtHGHbiFcC&pg=PA193. 1998. U of Chicago P. 9780226263199. 193/96. Problems of Polychromy: New Sculptures by Michael Bolus.

  2. News: Juliff. Toby. A New Generation of British Art: A Problem of Provincialism. 2018. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Art. Sydney. 125–145.
  3. News: Juliff. Toby. A New Generation of British Art: A Problem of Provincialism. 2018. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Art. Sydney. 125–145.
  4. Web site: The TIME Vault: June 3, 1966.
  5. "Minimal Art", edited by Gregory Battcock, Michael Benedikt: Sculpture as Architecture: New York letter,1966–67 page 61 SBN 289 79593 1
  6. Further reading The New Generation Exhibition catalogue, Whitechapel Art Gallery, 1965
  7. New British Sculpture/Bristol 1968: a new engagement with public artA text by Julian Warren, Archivist at Arnolfini, and Bristol Record OfficeMay 2011.
  8. July 2016 "Artist Boss: Anthony Caros studio assistants and issues of legacy in British sculpture". By J.Dunseath Coeditor Dr M Wilsher .