San Vito Revisited

Using text by William Massey this beautiful inscription has been designed, hand-carved, painted and gilded (with aluminium leaf and gold) by Annet Stirling into a block of Burlington Grey Slate.  This is an original and unique work of art by one of the world’s most creative Letterwork Sculptors and will look magnificent both inside and out.  Under the alphabet letters, the text reads:

Whence did the wond’rous mystic art arise,
Of painting speech, and speaking to the eyes?
That we by tracing magic lines are taught
How to embody, and to colour thought?

Burlington Blue slate is an even blue grey colour throughout and architects have often used it in landmark buildings for its natural beauty, durability and adaptability. It has been sourced from the Kirkby quarry, just above the village of Kirkby-in-Furness in Cumbria, UK. Kirkby Stone is sedimentary in nature and was formed in the Silurian period, some 300-350 million years ago.

To watch a short video of this piece, click here

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Additional information

Medium

Burlington Grey Slate

Year

2010

Original / Edition

Original work of art

Size

60 x 60 x 2 cm

Description

Annet Stirling is a sculptor, specialising in letters, words and text.  Since the late 1980’s, she has undertaken many public and private commissions in the United Kingdom and Europe, working extensively with Ian Hamilton Finlay and exploring the boundaries of legibility and abstraction in letterform.  Her work can be seen around London in Westminster Abbey, St Martins in the Fields, Royal Festival Hall, Royal Opera House, National Gallery, House of Commons. Like most letter-cutters, Annet was trained in the drawing of specific classical Roman alphabets for carving, yet her work has moved in new and more modern directions, influenced by the physical aspects of mark making using tools on raw stone. More recently the use of laser-cut Corten steel has been explored to produce editioned works.

Annet trained as a graphic designer in the Netherlands before studying lettering at the City and Guilds of London Art School with Berthold Wolpe, and then finishing her education as an apprentice with Richard Kindersley.  In 1988 she formed Incisive Letterwork with Brenda Berman, focusing on large-scale architectural inscriptions and ‘word sculpture’.  She travelled throughout Italy on a Churchill Fellowship studying Roman and Renaissance inscriptions.  She also has a particular love of a quarry in Dorset where she has spent a considerable amount of time over the years.

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