'˜Selling its heritage': Backlash at Wakefield school's decision to sell Barbara Hepworth sculptures
Old girls’ from Wakefield Girls’ High School (WGHS) are calling for the sale, to be held at Sotheby’s next month, to be halted, and the decision process behind the move to be examined.
Their campaign was by boosted by Hepworth’s granddaughter, an art historian, who said she “shares the dismay” felt by the former pupils and said the artist “would never have imagined” the works would one day by sold off.
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Hide AdAs revealed in The Yorkshire Post last weekend, WGHS plan to sell the two sculptures, Quiet Form and Forms in Movement (Galliard) to fund new bursaries and educational opportunities in Hepworth’s name, after the price of insuring the works rocketed due to the increasing price paid for the artist’s work.
But the former students say the pieces are an important part of the school’s history and selling them would go against Hepworth’s wishes. They are also claiming a “lack of transparency” in the way the school has gone about selling the works.
Former pupil Wendy Henry, of Ripon, North Yorkshire, has urged the school to stop the sale.
She said many of the former pupils “are suspicious of the motives behind the decision”.
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Hide AdMrs Henry said: “Surely due process would dictate that all options to keep the pieces in the school should be looked at before moving to sell them, including appealing to all former and current stakeholders for financial assistance?”
Hepworth’s granddaughter, art historian and a trustee of the Hepworth Estate, Dr Sophie Bowness, told The Yorkshire Post that she shared the dismay “that’s been voiced by many at the decision of the Governors”.
“The school will lose an important part of its heritage with the sale of their Hepworth sculptures,” she added.
The first piece, Galliard, was provided to the school in 1960 at a reduced price of just 200 guineas to celebrate the opening of its new gymnasium.
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Hide AdDr Bowness said: “She was thrilled that it was to become part of the life of the school, and would never have imagined that the school would one day sell it.”
The second piece, Quiet Form, was made specially by Hepworth as a retirement present for her friend, then-headmistress Margaret Knott in 1973. Although she waived her sculptor’s fee, the costs were paid for by the school’s Parent and School Association, with parents and the school donating towards the cost.
Miss Knott, who died in 2014 at the age of 100, gave the piece to the school for display in 2003.
Former student Carol Atack, who attended between 1975 and 1982 and is now a lecturer in history at the University of Warwick, said: “I was at the school in the late 1970s when the sculptures were on display and it was a real inspiration to hear about a woman who could go from Wakefield to take on the world and become an international figure. Having a visible and tangible link to Barbara Hepworth was really important.
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