From the Archive: “The Student”

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Today we have dived back into the archives and have brought you photos of Tom Bass creating “The Student”. When The University of Sydney commissioned “The Student” from Tom Bass in 1953, it became the university’s earliest modernist public artwork. Until a couple of years ago, students and visitors have been greeted by the cubist-style, figurative sculpture as they enter the university’s main gates off Parramatta Road. It stood there in the sun, positioned amongst trees, lawns and tennis courts.

In late 2018, the sculpture was relocated to a new site on the university’s Botany Lawn. This is a temporary arrangement pending its move, later this year, to grace the entrance to the new Chau Chak Wing Museum, presently under construction inside the Parramatta Road gates. ‘The Student’ was carved in sandstone at Minto by Tom at the age of 37. It was an early work and one of the few carved sculptures Tom made in his extensive career as a public sculptor. The sandstone came from Saunders (Bondi) Quarries P/L.

The rhythmic lines of “The Student” enhance the feeling of internal reflection and the viewer unconsciously re imagines Rodin’s “The Thinker”. Bass wished the sculpture to express the idea the university is a place not just for teaching but also for learning.

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The Chau Chak Wing Museum is intended to provide centralised accommodation for the existing university collections and an innovative cultural and intellectual space for the university. It is named after Dr Chau Chak Wing, a Chinese-Australian businessman and philanthropist, whose generous donation has enabled the University of Sydney to embark on this ambitious project.

The new museum will house the collections of the Macleay Museum, Nicholson Museum and University Art Gallery, as well as other cultural highlights from the university’s collections. The Museum will open later this year.

Also at the university are Tom’s sculptures of “The Arts and the Sciences” on high in the niches on the front wall of the Great Hall, a work commissioned by Dr Lloyd Rees in 1984.

Images courtesy of the Bass family and TBSSS archive.

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