This sculpture is a rubber cast of Quinn's naked body, split to the neck and suspended from a rope. Quinn describes it as 'an extreme moment of transformation, a violent shedding of the skin.'
Young people aged 15-18 from across Manchester have been working with artist Paul Needham to create new interpretation for the gallery. They have been exploring themes in the Romantic gallery, particularly looking at Ford Madox Brown's Manfred on the Jungfrau. Using the contemporary sculpture for inspiration, they have developed new ways of thinking and looking at more traditional artworks.
Their new interpretation consists of a dramatic sound installation in the gallery created at Futureworks Media School. Quotations in vinyl also snake across the gallery floor. A DVD - produced by Let's Go Global - and booklet also document the project.
Visual Dialogues: Young people and artists interpreting art together.
Visual Dialogues is a partnership programme managed by Tate Britain working with Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery, Manchester Art Gallery, Museums Sheffield and Tyne and Wear Museums. The programme is jointly funded by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport and the Department for Children, Schools and Families as part of the Strategic Commissioning Programme for Museum and Gallery Education.