Women's sculpture show marks 75 years of Arts Council Collection

Image source, Anna Arca

Image caption, Breaking the Mould examines women's work in sculpture since 1945

Works by renowned British female artists including Rachel Whiteread and Barbara Hepworth have gone on show at the Yorkshire Sculpture Park.

The exhibition, entitled "Breaking the Mould", examines women's sculpture since 1945 and marks the 75th anniversary of the Arts Council Collection.

Image source, Bowness

Image caption, Reconstruction by Barbara Hepworth, 1947

Image source, Rachel Whiteread

Image caption, Untitled (6 Spaces) by Rachel Whiteread, 1994

It also includes pieces previously unseen including a toilet shaped into a seashell by Rose Finn Kelcey.

Arts Council Collection said it was committed to "reflecting diversity".

The exhibition, which has opened at the park's Longside Gallery, features more than 50 works by artists including Sarah Lucas, Mona Hatoum and Kim Lim.

Image source, Estate of Rose Finn-Kelcey

Image caption, Rose Finn-Kelcey's God's Bog, which she produced in 2001, is on display for the first time

Image source, Sarah Lucas

Image caption, NUD CYCLADIC 7 by Sarah Lucas, 2010

Nine works from the collection are being displayed to the public for the first time including a ceramic sculpture of a pillow held between dimpled thighs by Katie Cuddon.

Many of the 50 artists featured have "challenged ingrained notions of sculpture as a 'male occupation' by embracing new materials, subjects and approaches", while others have "avoided institutional bias by producing work for alternative spaces," Arts Council Collection said.

"This exhibition provides a radical recalibration, addressing the many accounts of British sculpture that have marginalised women or airbrushed their work out of the art historical canon altogether," it said.

Image source, Estate of Kim Lim

Image caption, Samurai by Kim Lim, 1961

Deborah Smith, director of the Arts Council Collection, added: "This is the largest survey of its kind to date, it demonstrates the breadth and depth of works in our collection and our ongoing commitment to reflecting diversity within our acquisitions and programmes."

The show runs until 5 September and will move to Nottingham before heading to Plymouth, Hull and Walsall.

Image source, Holly Hendry

Image caption, Holly Hendry's Gut Feelings Stromalith, which she produced in 2016, is previously unseen

The Arts Council Collection, which was formed when the Arts Council of Great Britain was founded in 1946, supports and promotes British artists by buying and displaying their work.

It holds in excess of 8,000 artworks, of which more than 250 are sculptures by women.