Open: Mon-Sat 10am-6pm

74 Newman Street, W1T 3DB, London, United Kingdom
Open: Mon-Sat 10am-6pm


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Rado Kirov: Quicksilver

Pontone Gallery, London

Sat 4 Jun 2022 to Sun 17 Jul 2022

74 Newman Street, W1T 3DB Rado Kirov: Quicksilver

Mon-Sat 10am-6pm

Artist: Rado Kirov


Artworks

Rado Kirov, Fishpond, 2013

Mirror stainless steel

1150.0 × 1150.0 mm

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Rado Kirov, Mood, 2022

Mirrored Stainless Steel

200.0 × 1100.0 × 200.0 mm

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Rado Kirov, Tumbling cubes, 2018

Mirrored stainless steel

720.0 × 540.0 × 1070.0 mm

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Rado Kirov, Ornament 1, 2022

Mirrored Stainless Steel

100.0 × 450.0 × 100.0 mm

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Rado Kirov, The Melt 2, 2016

Mirrored stainless steel

700.0 × 1400.0 mm

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Rado Kirov, Ornament 2, 2022

Mirrored Stainless Steel

150.0 × 830.0 × 150.0 mm

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Rado Kirov, Free Fall 4, 2018

Mirrored stainless steel

540.0 × 900.0 × 540.0 mm

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Rado Kirov, Ornament 3, 2022

Mirrored Stainless Steel

220.0 × 1210.0 × 220.0 mm

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Rado Kirov, The Melt 1, 2016

Mirrored stainless steel

1750.0 × 700.0 mm

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Rado Kirov, 3D Wall Panel 2, 2016

Mirrored stainless steel

900.0 × 900.0 mm

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Installation Views

Installation image for Rado Kirov: Quicksilver, at Pontone Gallery Installation image for Rado Kirov: Quicksilver, at Pontone Gallery Installation image for Rado Kirov: Quicksilver, at Pontone Gallery Installation image for Rado Kirov: Quicksilver, at Pontone Gallery Installation image for Rado Kirov: Quicksilver, at Pontone Gallery Installation image for Rado Kirov: Quicksilver, at Pontone Gallery

Bulgarian sculptor, Rado Kirov, trained as a coppersmith and initially pursued a career as a skilled craftsman of precious metals. He spent the 1990s in South Africa where he worked on many prestigious commissions, becoming particularly well known for making a silver chalice presented by President Nelson Mandela to Pope John Paul II.



Subsequently he has focused on sculpture, enlarging his scale and range, to forge a career in free-standing and wall-based steel structures. Pontone Gallery has a long-standing relationship with the artist and is delighted to exhibit these new pieces.



Kirov's background as a metalworker equips him with a profound knowledge of technique and a keen awareness of the aesthetic properties and potentials of his material. Since his move to sculpture, he has worked in stainless steel. Building on his intimate knowledge and overcoming technical challenges, he has developed a secret method, which he refers to as 'the mercury effect.' This involves applying hand techniques and the manipulation of extreme temperatures to produce an undulating and rippled surface. He smooths and polishes this to a mirror finish, as glossy and seductive as chrome.



This collection consists of elegant, blade-shaped columns, made from welded sheets which curve and twist to resolve in fine points. They shine, glisten and flow like quicksilver. In addition, blunter, obelisk-like forms end in a truncated cage structure, whose dark finish creates an almost brutal contrast with the glacial smoothness of the lower surface.



The apparent sleek modernity of Kirov's structures masks an elemental sculptural impulse, which suggests ancient monoliths and archaic proto-monuments. Seen as pure forms, these objects look like spear and arrow heads, prehistoric way-markers and votive pillars. Fabricated from the material of contemporary industrial production, they insinuate themselves into our world. Shiny and mercurial, cloaked in reflections, they smuggle old things into new places.

Courtesy of the artist and Pontone Gallery, London

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