10th Annual Human Form Show
Why do we think and like art of the Human Form? Because art is a means of communicating human experiences, human bodies are naturally depicted. The figurative form can be used as the ideal medium
to convey a spectrum of ideas with which the viewer can resonate. The human figure has always been a common subject of visual art, "it forces the viewer to engage the artwork and enables the
artist to express an entire range of ideas from the subtle to the intense". In the history of art the human figure bears, in different ways and through different periods in time, a huge
significance, being the most direct means by which art can address the human condition. Throughout time the human figure has always been a common subject of the visual arts. The earliest
depictions of the human body have been dated to be from 25,000 and 12,000 years ago. Over the centuries, artists have drawn, painted and formed, the image of the human figure since these
ancient times. Artists from different cultures and time periods throughout history have depicted the human figure in many diverse ways.
The art on display in the Hilliard Gallery’s 10th annual Human Form in Art show has been selected and grouped together, depicting the human form, by artists working in today's climate of
society. The artwork in this show consists of enormous diversity in materials, techniques, beliefs, and notions of beauty. The artists that created these objects have used a variety of
techniques and mediums. Some appear realistic in execution and others stylized or abstract. Comparing objects that have been made by different artists of the same culture can reveal how
figurative art often reflects cultural influences.
The human body has always been an inspiration. It has become one of the highest forms of fine art to be made, studied, remade and restudied. The human form is “unceasingly beautiful”, complex in
form and shape, and undeniably remarkable. It is one of the very few things that all of us have in common. Finding artistic and beauty in the human form is only natural and this show will
showcase some of the best work that represents this notion.