Barbara Hepworth acquired Trewyn Studio in the centre of St Ives in September 1949. She immediately began working in the space and lived there until her death in 1975. While living at Trewyn Studio she wrote hundreds of letters to family and friends describing the inspiration and contentment she felt in St Ives. "It is completely perfect for me", she wrote to Philip James, Director of Art at the Arts Council, on 29 August 1949. Tate Archive contains a wealth of material on artists, art world figures and art organisations in Britain from 1900 to the present day. Over one million items that relate closely to Tate’s collection are held, including artworks, sketchbooks, letters, writings, audio-visual material, photographs, printed ephemera and press cuttings.
Barbara Hepworth's Letters
We discover some of Hepworth's writings in Tate’s Archive and explore the landscape that inspired the her words and her work
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Who is Barbara Hepworth?
Find out all about Barbara Hepworth who created huge sculptures inspired by the natural world
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Emma Gannon on Barbara Hepworth and St Ives
Discover a place known for its pottery, boats, beaches and beatniks
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An Introduction to Barbara Hepworth
Curator Chris Stephens spotlights the physical process and attention to detail behind Hepworth’s work
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Barbara Hepworth's Sculpture Garden
This film includes archival footage from an interview with the artist from 1973