LONDON.- British artist Alex Chinneck unveiled his most complex and ambitious sculpture to date at
Circus Street in Brighton on 20 December.
Titled, A Spring in your step, the new site-specific artwork takes the form of a spiral staircase spectacularly springing apart in three directions across the facade of a building in Circus Street, a new neighbourhood developed by regeneration specialist U+I in Brighton.
Made from galvanised steel, and reaching 25 metres overhead, the surreal sculpture occupies the full height of a key architectural elevation at the heart of the square in Circus Street, creating a bold backdrop for this new event space. The artwork was conceived in direct response to the location and seeks to contribute to the energetic creative atmosphere envisaged for it.
A Spring in your step transforms an ordinary staircase into an extraordinary sculpture. Following the form of a spiral staircase at its base, the structure uncoils as it rises upwards and outwards over Circus Streets central courtyard. Its three steel ribbons burst apart with sculptural energy, introducing movement into the volume above the courtyard while helping to animate and enliven the space below. This is characteristic of the artists work, which takes complex paths to playful results.
Commenting on the sculpture, Alex Chinneck said: A Spring in your step took three years to complete, weighs four tonnes, is 25 metres tall, and follows a non-repeating, expanding and contracting helical form - making it my most complex sculpture to date.
Best known for creating ambitious public sculptures on an architectural scale, Alex Chinneck has previously been invited to create flagship projects for London Design Festival and Milan Design Week. Past projects include a sliding house in Margate; a hovering stone building on Covent Garden Piazza; an inverted electricity pylon on Greenwich Peninsula; and an unzipping building in Milan.
Uniting the disciplines of art, design and architecture, Alex Chinnecks work challenges our understanding of familiar objects and materials to create surreal sculptures that transform the ordinary into the extraordinary.