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Artworks
A6-534 FLIGHT No1.jpeg
Peter Burke
A6-534 Flight No.1, 2026Steel and gold leaf40 x 40. x 11.cm.
15.75 x 15.75 x 4.33 in.A6-534 Flight No.1 by Peter Burke is a steel and gold leaf sculpture that forms part of the artist’s ongoing exploration of staircases as symbolic structures of human movement, transition, and psychological experience. Within Burke’s broader practice, the staircase becomes a recurring motif through which ideas of ascent, descent, and passage are reconsidered in relation to contemporary industrial life. Constructed from steel, the work emphasises structural clarity and material directness, reflecting the industrial environment that informs much of Burke’s sculptural language. The addition of gold leaf introduces a contrasting surface quality, shifting the reading of the object from purely functional structure to something imbued with heightened significance. This interplay between raw construction and refined surface treatment creates a visual and conceptual tension that is central to the work’s meaning. The composition suggests the fragmented logic of a stair flight, as if the structure has been distilled into essential elements of movement rather than presented as a complete architectural system. This abstraction encourages the viewer to engage with the work as both object and metaphor, where the act of climbing or descending becomes a stand-in for broader human experiences of effort, ambition, uncertainty, and change. In keeping with Burke’s wider sculptural approach, Flight No.1 resists fixed interpretation. Instead, it operates on an intuitive, experiential level, reflecting the artist’s interest in how sculptural forms can evoke instinctive responses rooted in bodily and psychological awareness. The staircase is not only a physical construct but also a mental and emotional pathway, shaped by memory and association. Through the combination of industrial material and gilded detail, A6-534 Flight No.1 reflects Burke’s sustained investigation into the human condition within a technologically constructed world. The work holds in tension ideas of stability and transition, grounding and elevation, inviting reflection on the fundamental structures, both literal and metaphorical, that underpin lived experience.
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