Culture
Jun 14, 2026
'I have a naughty schoolboy attitude': Anish Kapoor reveals his latest epic creations
Renowned artist Anish Kapoor opens up about his creative process and reveals his latest monumental …
The Artist's Creative SanctuaryIn Anish Kapoor's 3,100 sq metre studio complex in south London, photographers, assistants and gallery representatives gather in an upstairs meeting room. The artist has a staff of 23 in London – 11 studio assistants, nine people in the offices, three stone masons at a yard in Battersea – and some have been with him for decades. When he's in town, everyone wants a piece ("It's like The West Wing," says one gallery rep).The studio, which takes up most of a converted dairy factory, is an upstairs-downstairs warren. Each room is dedicated to a different kind of thing: large red installations; small black sculptures; exhibition layout models; lacquered concave mirror paintings; archival drawings. In the upstairs meeting room, there is a weekly calendar hand-drawn over eight sheets of A3 paper with, beneath it, a very long list titled "Unfinished Hayward Works". And on the windowsill stands a curious item: a solid cylinder of concrete, excavated from the Southbank Centre's Hayward Gallery.The Monumental Installation: Ha MakomThat cylinder was brought over by Kapoor's old friend, the outgoing Hayward Gallery director Ralph Rugoff, to celebrate Kapoor's 72nd birthday in March, as well as their current collaboration. It is symbolic of the 1.5 metre-wide bit of gallery floor that Kapoor has just had drilled out in preparation for his career-spanning show, which opens at the Hayward this week. (Rugoff describes the cylinder as the perfect gift for the artist who has spent his life producing voids: "This is what happens when you do that.")Threading a path between bulbous shapes wrapped in protective coverings, Kapoor heads for a giant, red mountain-like structure, just below the peak of which he has carved out one of his signature voids – a dark rectangular aperture. The structure, he explains, is one of the 31 parts comprising a new piece, titled Ha Makom, that is destined for the Hayward. "It's a huge work, huge work," he says, gesturing all over the room. "There's a part of it, there's another."The Artist's Philosophy and ApproachEmerging from his office in a faded black jacket and scuffed trainers, Kapoor embarks on a rapid-fire walk-and-talk tour, shoulders slightly hunched, like a trail runner hitting their stride. "Honestly," he says, "everything's a total mess here. But it doesn't matter. Come."The Southbank Centre was the first to give Kapoor a major show in the UK, in 1998. He is one of the few artists to be asked back for a solo show. "I'm both excited and a little terrified," he says. Tellingly, the pieces he's most anxious about, he says, are those the public know best.When asked about his approach to art, Kapoor reveals his characteristic self-description: "I have a naughty schoolboy attitude." This playful perspective contrasts with the monumental scale of his works and the technical precision required to create them.The Significance of the Hayward ExhibitionThe upcoming exhibition at the Hayward Gallery represents a significant milestone in Kapoor's career. As one of the few artists to be invited back for a solo show at the Southbank Centre venue, this exhibition offers a comprehensive overview of his artistic journey. The show will feature not only his latest monumental works like Ha Makom but also archival pieces that trace his development as an artist.The exhibition also marks a full circle moment for Kapoor, who received his first major UK show at this venue in 1998. This return engagement underscores his enduring significance in the contemporary art world and the institution's continued recognition of his contribution to visual culture.The Future of Kapoor's Artistic VisionAt 72 years old, Kapoor shows no signs of slowing down his artistic output. His new work Ha Makom, comprising 31 distinct parts, demonstrates his continued ambition to create immersive, large-scale installations that challenge viewers' perceptions of space and form. The piece exemplifies his ongoing exploration of the void – a central theme throughout his career.As Kapoor continues to push the boundaries of contemporary sculpture, his work remains influential in the global art scene. The Hayward exhibition, which includes both recent works and archival pieces, offers audiences a rare opportunity to witness the full scope of his artistic vision and understand the evolution of his distinctive approach to creating objects that occupy both physical and psychological space.
#Anish Kapoor
#Contemporary Art
#Hayward Gallery
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