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Fashion and Lifestyle

William Kentridge: Pull of Gravity

28 June 2025 – 19 April 2026 Underground Gallery and Outdoors Yorkshire Sculpture Park (YSP) presents a new landmark exhibition by the celebrated South African artist, William Kentridge (b.1955). The Pull of Gravity marks the first museum presentation outside South Africa to focus on his sculpture and has been a decade in the making. Bringing together over 40 works made between 2007 and 2024, this significant project is a carefully choreographed and multi-sensory journey into William’s worl

The Editor

The Editor

·6 min read
William Kentridge: Pull of Gravity

28 June 2025 – 19 April 2026
Underground Gallery and Outdoors

Yorkshire Sculpture Park (YSP) presents a new landmark exhibition by the celebrated South African artist, William Kentridge (b.1955). The Pull of Gravity marks the first museum presentation outside South Africa to focus on his sculpture and has been a decade in the making.

Bringing together over 40 works made between 2007 and 2024, this significant project is a carefully choreographed and multi-sensory journey into William’s world. Paper Procession, displayed outdoors, is a commission created for YSP of six monumental, colourful sculptures that parade in front of a century-old yew hedge. Joining this new work are four of the artist’s largest bronzes to date, displayed against far-reaching views over the Yorkshire landscape.

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The Pull of Gravity presents an extensive body of sculpture across a range of scales and materials, including bronze, steel, aluminium, paper, cardboard, plaster, wood, and found objects. In addition, the exhibition features the first institutional presentation of Self-Portrait as a Coffee Pot (2020-24). This series of short films was embarked upon during the first Covid-19 lockdown and allows audiences an intimate insight into the life of William’s studio, the workings of his mind, and the energy and agency of making. In the central gallery space, two films – More Sweetly Play the Dance (2015) and Oh To Believe In Another World (2022) – are shown in rotation in an immersive installation across seven screens. They span over 20 metres and wrap around the viewers, surrounding them with music and movement.

William is known for working across media, including drawing, sculpture, tapestry, animated films, theatre, and opera productions. He has lived in Johannesburg throughout his life and his practice is indelibly connected to the socio-political history of South Africa. From a standpoint that rejects certainty, he questions grand narratives from history, politics, science, literature and music, alongside an ongoing interrogation of the legacy of colonialism.

Clare Lilley, YSP director said: “Yorkshire Sculpture Park has had a long-held ambition to work with William Kentridge and for more than a decade we have had conversations about sculpture. It is with a profound sense of joy to now present a substantial and representative body of Kentridge’s sculptural work. The artist has created a new series of monumental painted aluminium and steel sculptures which are joined by large bronzes in the stunning Yorkshire landscape. This ambitious exhibition will be a whirlwind of sound and image where the personal and political, the rhapsodic and ordinary, and the seemingly insignificant and socially imperative collide, creating a potent, dynamic world.”

Although tackling pressing and difficult subjects, William does so with openness and curiosity around the human condition. The artist makes works that are acerbic and challenging, yet they embrace the enduring possibility of hope and abound with poeticism and beauty. These ideas are often explored using metaphors of darkness and light, lightness and weight – all considerations that are vital to his sculpture.

Over the last two decades, sculpture has increasingly become a key part of William’s practice, taking drawing into three dimensions and developing from puppetry, film and stage props. The inextricable relationship between drawing and sculpture in his work is at the heart of The Pull of Gravity. His sculptures delve into how the essence of form is constructed, perceived and understood, testing the boundaries of the medium and its potential to embody ideas and question ways of seeing.

William writes: “I never thought of myself as a sculptor, but I had worked a lot with shadows in performance and in drawings and I was interested in the possibility of making something like a shadow – so ephemeral and without any substance – to be solid.”

William’s engagement with the history of sculpture-making can be seen in works that reference wide-ranging sources of inspiration, from Picasso’s bronze The She Goat (1950) to the ancient figure of Laocoön (27 BC–68 AD). Kentridge’s own Laocoön (Plaster) (2021) has interlaced and arcing forms that echo the energy and movement of its ancient namesake. Bringing the relationship between three-dimensional and two-dimensional forms into focus are large drawings on the gallery walls that mirror the shapes of the sculpture and which explore the connected concepts of positive and negative, darkness and light, shadows and silhouettes.

Running throughout the exhibition, from table-top to monumental scale, is a family of bronzes known as Glyph that demonstrates Kentridge’s distinctive sculptural language and process. Depicting objects from domestic or studio life – such as a typewriter, coffee pot, and scissors – together with animals, birds and figures, these symbols repeat across his work. Each Glyph begins its life as a two-dimensional ink drawing or paper cut-out. This outline is then traced onto cardboard, carefully removed and built into a three-dimensional form using foamcore and wax to add volume and refine its form, before being cast in bronze. In reference to both ink and shadows, the bronzes all have a black patina. This is a process of bringing an object into existence, adding weight and heft, and one that resonates with the exhibition’s title, The Pull of Gravity.

William’s sculptures will also be sited outdoors in YSP’s historic landscape, including at the top of the sloping Bothy Garden where large-scale bronzes process powerfully against the backdrop of a curving early 19th-century brick wall. Over three and a half metres in height, these Glyph works include a striding figure with megaphone head, an ampersand, and a stretching cat. The six towering and dynamic forms of the significant new commission Paper Procession (2024) stand up to five metres high and their bold tones of red, yellow and orange sing against the dark yew hedge beyond. They were initially created using hand-torn pieces of paper from a cash book and assembled to evoke semi-abstract figures in movement; they retain the form of the original 30cm high versions displayed inside the gallery.

William said: “I am delighted to be having an exhibition at Yorkshire Sculpture Park this year. It is a place with a great history and I am pleased to be in the company of the exceptional artists who have shown there over the years. This exhibition shows the transition of the drawn silhouette or shadow to sculpture and that sculpture is a form of drawing.”

Further works engage with historic sculptural modes and movements. William subverts the loaded tradition of equestrian sculpture in a series of seven bronze horse sculptures which form part of the body of work made for his production of The Nose (2010). He writes: “there is a history of self-glorification, in the historical parade of equestrian statues.... I wanted to see if I could make an anti-heroic equestrian statue, a horse least worthy of being on a plinth.” Fragmenting solid form and moving away from a complete, monolithic statement, Kentridge assembled his horses from pieces of cardboard, clamps, twigs, rulers, and other “detritus lying around the studio”. Even through the process of then being cast into bronze, these sculptures retain their sense of anti-monumentality, precarity, and absurdity.

The artist’s kinship with early 20th-century avant-garde movements such as Dada and Surrealism also manifests across his practice in his celebration of the illogical and darkly humorous. Connecting to artists such as Marcel Duchamp, Alexander Calder, and Jean Tinguely, the kinetic work Singer Trio (2019) features three sewing machines with megaphones that sound out vocals by South African singer and choreographer Nhlanhla Mahlangu and welcome audiences into the gallery. It is joined by Semaphore (2011) and Bicycle Wheel III (double megaphone) (2012).

In addition to sculpture, a selection of films, tapestry, and drawings are brought together in an exhibition designed by one of Kentridge’s long-term collaborators, Sabine Theunissen. In the large central gallery, two films create a truly absorbing experience, shown on seven large screens that fill the space. The iconic More Sweetly Play the Dance (2015) is a caravan of figures in silhouette, including a brass band, animated skeletons, and figures that references the migration of refugees, the West African Ebola outbreak and so on, accompanied by haunting music.

Oh To Believe in Another World (2022) explores composer Dmitri Shostakovich’s troubled relationship with Stalin through the lens of his Symphony No.10, which anticipated and could only be released after the despotic leader’s death. It speaks of the role of artists as agents of opposition and finding freedom in the face of totalitarian regimes.

Visitors will be able to engage with a programme of activities at YSP, drawing on themes in William’s work. A catalogue featuring a newly commissioned essay by Tamar Garb and in-situ photography will be published to coincide with the exhibition and will be for sale online and in the YSP shop.

The exhibition is made possible through the generosity of the Sakana Foundation, Goodman Gallery, Hauser & Wirth, and Lia Rumma Gallery. Supported by the kind philanthropy of the William Kentridge Exhibition Circle. Logistics partner: Crozier Fine Arts. Additional support: Stonehage Fleming.

William Kentridge Exhibition Circle: Anonymous Supporters; A4 Arts Foundation; The Bukhman Foundation; Jill Hackel and Andrzej Zarzycki and Kim Manocherian’s Scheherazade Collection, NY.

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