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Major exhibition by acclaimed British sculptor Stephen Cox to showcase at Houghton Hall

Stephen Cox, Interior Space, 1995, carved Egyptian breccia. Installation Houghton Hall, Norfolk. Courtesy of Houghton Hall.

A major exhibition by acclaimed British sculptor Stephen Cox will be showcased at Houghton Hall in Norfolk, spanning its park, gardens, and interiors from 4th May to 28th September.

This will be the artist’s most extensive and comprehensive display to date, featuring works created over 40 years in locations ranging from India and Egypt to Italy and the UK.

Stephen Cox, Interior Space: For Khafre, 2021, aswan granite, 2.2 x 4.2 x 2 m. Installation The Pyramids Plateau, Giza, Egypt. Photographed by Hassan Mahmoud

Around 20 sculptures in marble and stone will be placed in the landscape, while smaller works will be installed in the State Rooms on the first floor of the house, where William Kent’s exuberant decorative scheme has hardly changed since it was created in the early 18th century. A modern gallery space in the South wing of the house will show a group of works on paper together with a large marble and porphyry sculpture, Shrine, which was created for the celebrated Encounters exhibition at the National Gallery in 2000.

“I work amongst diverse cultures and look for the imaginative which, like poetry, gives us ‘meaning’ without definition.  We speculate on our origins, but we carry the answers in the very ‘matter’ of our being.  In India the ancient cycles of Hinduism are rendered with narratives elicited from stone forming magical spectres, where dance initiates the beginning of Time and creatures in its thrall.  From the geology of ancient Egypt, we see ‘drawing’, in intractable mediums, the creation that describes the architecture of our Earth floating in the star struck heavens.”

Stephen Cox
Stephen Cox, Interior Space: Shrine (a Porphyra), 2000, Imperial Portphyry and Bardiglio Imperiale, 230 x 430 x 200 cm. Courtesy of the National Gallery.

Stephen Cox is one of the most acclaimed British artists of his generation, best known for his monumental works in stone. His work is known worldwide, with celebrated exhibitions including MOMA, New York and the National Gallery and Tate Britain, London. Using traditional techniques, he has carved marble, alabaster and porphyry, and was the first artist for many centuries to gain access to the Imperial Porphyry Quarries in the Eastern Mountains of Egypt. His works are in many private and public collections around the world, with government and corporate commissions in India and Egypt as well as in Britain. He was elected a Royal Academician in 2006.

Stephen Cox, Patra, 1995- 6, basalt / dolerite, 206 x 101 x 73 cm including base. Private Collection UK. Courtesy of the artist

Lord Cholmondeley, owner of Houghton Hall, said,

‘’Twenty years after we installed his elegant sculpture, Interior Space, in the woods at Houghton, we are delighted to be hosting this major retrospective of Stephen’s work, spanning four decades. With the ancient civilisations of Egypt, India and Rome as his inspirations, he is unique amongst contemporary artists in using the rarest of marbles, Imperial Porphyry, as one of his main materials.”

The exhibition is organised by the Houghton Arts Foundation, supported by the Rothschild Foundation and with key assistance from the artist.

Stephen Cox at Houghton Hall, 4th May – 28th September 2025, Houghton Hall, Norfolk

Tickets: £22 when booked online; £24 at the gate/ Up to aged 18 go free. Students £10. Houghton Hall welcomes pre-booked groups, schools and colleges and runs an education programme.

Over the past 20 years, Houghton has presented some of the UK’s most outstanding contemporary exhibitions attracting considerable national and international interest. In 2015, Houghton hosted a major show of work by the American light artist, James Turrell, which included a slowly changing light display on the façade of the house. The show won a Highly Commended Hudson Heritage Award for Best Event / Exhibition. This was followed by a seasonal programme of solo shows: 2017 Richard Long, 2018 Damien Hirst, 2019 Henry Moore, 2020 Anish Kapoor, 2021 Tony Cragg / Chris Levine, 2022 John Virtue / Ernst Gemperl, 2023 Sean Scully. In 2024, Houghton presented Antony Gormley’s Time Horizon in the grounds, as well as ceramic and glass work by Magdalene Odundo inside the house.

Houghton Hall was built for Britain’s first prime minister, Sir Robert Walpole, in the 1720s and is one of the country’s best examples of the Palladian style, with architects Colin Campbell and James Gibbs working on the design, and Thomas Ripley – Surveyor of the King’s Works – responsible for its execution. Later, Sir Robert engaged the multi-talented William Kent to decorate the grand rooms on the state floor. The house passed to the Cholmondeley family through marriage in 1797 and is still lived in by the family.

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