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Houghton Hall and Gardens is CLOSED and will re-open in SPRING 2025

21 April - 31 October, 2024

Antony Gormley:
Time Horizon

Houghton Hall St Martin's Church

Time Horizon, one of Antony Gormley’s most spectacular large-scale installations, is open on Wednesday, Thursday and Sunday until it closes on Thursday 31 October 2024.  The exhibition is being shown across the grounds and through the house at Houghton Hall in Norfolk. It is the first time the work has been staged in the UK and it is attracting visitors from across the globe.

Featuring 100 life-size sculptures, the works are distributed across 300 acres of the park, the furthest away being approximately 1.5 miles on the West Avenue.  The cast-iron sculptures, each weighing 620kg and standing at an average of 191cm, are installed at the same datum level to create a single horizontal plane across the landscape.  Some works are buried, allowing only a part of the head to be visible, while others are buried to the chest or knees according to the topography.  Only occasionally do they stand on the existing surface.  Around a quarter of the works are placed on columns that vary from a few centimetres high to rising four metres off the ground.

"As visitors wander through the grounds of Houghton Hall, they are invited to contemplate the landscape’s vastness with the figures’ human scale. Gormley’s “Time Horizon” transcends the boundaries, offering a profound meditation on the human experience in all its beauty and complexity." Artlyst

Antony Gormley's Time Horizon at Hougton Hall and Gardens
About the Artist

Antony Gormley is one of the most important artists of his generation and is widely acclaimed for his sculptures, installations and public artworks that investigate the relationship of the human body to space.  His work has been exhibited throughout the UK and internationally.

 “My ambition for this show is that people should roam far and wide.  Art has recently privileged the object rather than the experience that objects can initiate.  Time Horizon is not a picture, it is a field and you are in it.  The work puts the experience of the subject/visitor/protagonist on an equal footing with all material presences, organic and inorganic.  The quality of the light, the time of the year, the state of the weather and the condition of your mind, body and soul are all implicated in the field, as is all the evidence within it of human activity already accomplished as well as the plethora of life forms that surround the hall.”

Plan your Visit

Enjoy a grand day out that exceeds expectations.

Antony Gormley's Time Horizon at Hougton Hall and Gardens
Acknowledgements

Organised by the Houghton Arts Foundation, with support from  Thaddaeus Ropac and White Cube galleries, and key assistance from the artist and his studio, this remarkable showcase is made possible. The Houghton Arts Foundation continues to build a collection of contemporary art at Houghton including a number of site-specific commissions.  With links to colleges and public institutions across the region, the Foundation’s aim is for Houghton to become a focus for those who wish to see great art of our time in a historic setting. 

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Houghton Arts Foundation logo

Plan your Visit

Enjoy a grand day out that exceeds expectations.

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