David Nash, Yorkshire Sculpture Park | reviews, news & interviews
David Nash, Yorkshire Sculpture Park
David Nash, Yorkshire Sculpture Park
A spellbinding 40-year career retrospective of the sculptor who works in wood
Saturday, 29 May 2010
Wood is a mysterious substance. We do not make it, it makes itself. It is useful to us, alive and dead. Without it, our history would not be the same. But it is so ever-present, so much a part of that history, that we rarely see the wood for the trees. David Nash has seen both the wood and the trees for years. To him, wood is life.

Inside the gallery, the mammoth trunk is countered by Oculus Block (pictured above right), a huge bole of a tree-root and trunk, some 12 tons, 2.4 metres across and three metres high, four trees that grew and, at some point over their centuries of life, fused together. This is framed by pieces of bark, shaped and leaning against the wall, framing the trunk as they framed and protected it in life. Two Vessels, two long canoe-shaped pieces of oak, scorched black along the prows and the hollowed interiors - blade-sharp in their forward motion - are transporters of living wood, thrusting into space.

There are also drawings (Nash combines elegant, precise draughtsmanship with lush, saturated colours) of projects such as Ash Dome, a circle of ashes planted in Wales in the 1970s. A video shows Nash through the decades pruning and shaping the circle to create the dome, aging as the trees grow, the two living constructs, man and trees, changing and maturing, together.
One vast gallery is filled with shapes and shadows to recreate the feel of his North Wales workshop. On entering, the room seems overstuffed; walk around, however, and shapes speak to each other across decades and across the space. Branch Cube, an ash outline of a box with branches “growing” out of it, is placed above a glass wall. The branches creep outwards, like ivy, and like ivy are curiously ambiguous, both ominous and delicate. On the other side of the wall, the huge Elm Ball sits, charred and brooding, and our view of the branches changes again, as next to the glass Cracking Box, a small, Dalek-shaped work, wonky and endearing, squats gently in the sunlight. Each new work immediately changes our perception of the last.

These schema bring Nash into focus, showing him as a serious thinker: about shape, about density, flux, transition and time. And it is hard to think of any place other than Yorkshire Sculpture Park where a retrospective of this sculptor’s career could be so satisfyingly displayed. Nash’s 40-year preoccupation with his material changes the way we look at wood, at not only its own shape, but the shapes it makes as it surrounds space, the shapes of voids and vacuums. Yorkshire Sculpture Park’s fine retrospective displays Nash as a sculptor of serious thought and, in equal measure, serious beauty.
- David Nash is at Yorkshire Sculpture Park, West Bretton, Wakefield until 27 February 2011
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