Thom Puckey
Thomas William Puckey is a British sculptor living in Amsterdam and Tuscany. He was awarded a master's degree in 1975 at the Royal College of Art, after studying fine art at Croydon College of Art. He moved to the Netherlands in 1979.
In 1990 he had a solo exhibition at the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam, where several of his works are in the permanent collection. He has shown his work in solo exhibitions at various well-known galleries and museums in the Netherlands, Belgium, Germany, and Italy.
He has taught art at several art academies in the Netherlands, including the Rijksakademie van beeldende kunsten as a sculpture tutor, and AKV St. Joost as a fine art tutor. In recent years, he has been a guest professor at various art academies and universities in China. His works are included in numerous international private and museum collections, and commissioned public sculptures are prominent in several cities in the Netherlands. In 2017 he completed a monument to Johan Rudolph Thorbecke, placed opposite the parliament buildings in The Hague.
In 2013 he designed a 5 euro commemorative coin in the Netherlands with the Peace Palace as subject.
In 1986 Puckey was awarded the Sandberg Prize (Netherlands) for Fine Art by the city of Amsterdam.
Artistic career
Performance
From 1972-1980 Puckey worked as a performance artist, forming the duo "Reindeer Werk" together with Dirk Larsen. Reindeer werk worked, performed and exhibited throughout Europe and North America, and participated in Documenta VI in 1977. Another of their highlights was their five days and nights long project 'A Prediction' at De Appel in Amsterdam.Sculpture
Since 1983 he has worked as a sculptor, first with optical/abstract sculptures. Later his sculptures became increasingly more figurative, his recent bronze and particularly marble sculptures strongly referring to 19th-century Realism. The models for these laborious works have always been specific people, and traditional methods of casting, carving, and finishing were used in their production.The realistically modeled or carved female nudes, precisely executed down to the most intimate detail, in striking poses with weapons, are depicted on everyday objects such as mattresses, pillows and furniture. The contrast between the nudity referring to classical antiquity, and the brutal-looking contemporary military technology collapses classical studio techniques with art-historical legacies and contemporary political implications.