Sir Eduardo Paolozzi

Sculptor and printmaker who created some of the finest examples of British pop art

Of the few British artists who came to international prominence soon after the second world war, Eduardo Luigi Paolozzi, who has died aged 81, was one of the most inventive, prolific and various. Chiefly a sculptor (and one of the first to react against the all-pervading influence of Henry Moore), he was also a highly original printmaker some of whose collage-based silkscreened images are among the finest examples of pop art - the style he was instrumental in shaping.

Paolozzi's career was the more remarkable for its unpromising beginnings. His parents, immigrants to Scotland from the remote Italian province of Frosinone, ran a small ice-cream pariour in Leith where Paolozzi was born. Although seemingly destined to inherit the business, he liked drawing so much that he thought of becoming a commercial artist. His ambitions soon became more elevated however, partly as a result of his determination to make his name in a country which he never regarded as entirely his own.

Paolozzi's father was an admirer of Mussolini and sent Eduardo to a fascist youth camp in Italy every summer where he acquired a liking for badges, uniforms and aeroplanes. When Italy declared war in 1940 his father was interned as an enemy alien. So was Paolozzi. He spent three months in Saughton jail, Edinburgh, while his father and grandfather were transported to Canada on the Arandora Star. The ship was sunk and they drowned. Although Paolozzi was not embittered by the tragedy he had nothing but contempt for most British politicians of every persuasion for the rest of his life.

His internment over, Paolozzi helped his mother make and sell ice cream while he attended the Edinburgh College of Art learning calligraphy and lettering. Then in 1943 he was conscripted, and spent more than a year with the Pioneer Corps, aimlessly bivouacked on a soccer pitch in Slough. Feigning madness to secure his release, he immediately enrolled at the Slade School, at that time evacuated to Oxford.

Paolozzi's natural gifts as a draftsman quickly became evident. So did his enthusiasm for the unconventional. Although he copied Old Master paintings in the Ashmolean, he preferred to draw the tribal art in the Pitt-Rivers Museum. Once the Slade returned to London, he also discovered the work of Picasso, of whom his teachers deeply disapproved.

Picasso's influence is plain in the primitivistic sculptures, energetic drawings, and elegant, cubist-derived collages which Paolozzi produced as a student. Their quality was immediately recognised, and in 1947 he was given a one-man exhibition at the Mayor Gallery. Everything on show was sold. Soon after, the celebrated magazine Horizon published an article about his work.

By then - and before completing his studies - Paolozzi had moved to Paris, armed with letters of introduction to Brancusi, Braque, Giacometti and several other famous artists. He intended to remain permanently in France, but, failing to attract the interest of dealers and critics, returned to London, somewhat crestfallen, in 1949.

Paolozzi saw and learned a great deal in Paris, above all about Dada and surrealism. His sculptures made at the time combine organic and mechanistic forms so as to suggest strange artefacts or mysteriously exotic growths. They share something with Giacometti's surrealist objects, but are less threatening and strikingly assured.

It was in Paris that Paolozzi also produced rudimentary collages from advertisements in American glossy magazines, the lurid covers of cheap novelettes, and illustrations from scientific books. They were inspired by Dada photomontage, but they were made chiefly for his own amusement, and only shown to friends some years later. Today they are regarded as important early examples of pop art.

Back in London, Paolozzi briefly shared a studio with Lucian Freud and then with William Turnbull, whom he had met at the Slade. He also came into contact with Francis Bacon and was stimulated by the painter's determination to take risks and his use of photographs as source material. Paolozzi's closest friendship, however, was with Nigel Henderson, the brilliant experimental photographer. They taught together at the Central School of Art and also founded a short-lived company, Hammer Prints, which made and sold textiles, wallpaper and tiles decorated with images produced by the silkscreen process.

During the early 1950s Paolozzi worked on several architectural projects, making a fountain for the Festival of Britain on the South Bank and another for the Hamburg Garden Show of 1953. In the same year he was a finalist in the much-publicised international competition to design a monument to the Unknown Political Prisoner.

At the Central School Paolozzi used silkscreening not only as a means of decoration but also to make limited edition prints. Many of the stencils were reproduced from drawings (some by young children) cut up and rearranged to make seemingly spontaneous compositions reminiscent of American abstract expressionist paintings, at that time virtually unknown in Europe.

Collage remained central to Paolozzi's methods, both as printmaker and sculptor, for the rest of his career. Everything he created began as an accumulation of unrelated images culled from a wide variety of sources which, when rearranged, achieved a new and surprising unity.

In his prints crude outlines of heads and standing figures were filled with fragmentary diagrams of automotive parts and other machines to suggest primitivistic robots. His sculpture was similar. The surfaces of his roughly cast, rudimentarily formed bronze heads and figures were thickly encrusted with the impressions of nuts, bolts, bits of toys, and other junk collected from dustbins and scrapyards. By turns horrifying, pathetic and comically ramshackle, these figures seemed to allude to the results of nuclear destruction, or to reflect the existential angst then current throughout Europe. They touched a contemporary nerve and they made his reputation.

Many of these sculptures were begun in the isolated cottage on the Essex coast to which Paolozzi moved soon after marrying in 1951. His wife, Freda Elliot, was a textile designer whose handsome, archetypically English looks made a striking contrast with his own dark, thickset, Mediterranean appearance. Mounting success soon enabled him to lease a studio in Chelsea where he would live alone during the week (and which he retained until the end of his life). He quickly came to lead two largely separate lives: one in London, the other as a weekend visitor to the country where his wife soon began to feel isolated, especially after all three of their daughters had gone away to boarding school.

During the 1950s Paolozzi became involved in the Independent Group, a loose association of young members of the Institute of Contemporary Arts. They met to discuss ideas and enthusiasms then ignored by the art pundits, above all science, technology, and popular culture, especially American movies and science fiction. In 1952, at the group's first meeting, Paolozzi projected a large number of his collages on to a screen. For most of his audience the juxtaposition of the weighty and trivial, the artistic and technological, were a revelation. The collages suggested a radically new aesthetic that, before the end of the decade, was to form the basis of pop art.

Paolozzi's determination to make his art mirror a wide range of disparate ideas and information also resulted in contributions to several unconventional and imaginative exhibitions. The most important were Parallel Of Life And Art (1953) and This Is Tomorrow (1956) both of which used photographs and installations to illustrate unexpected connections and affinities between art, science, technology, ethnography and archaeology.

During the same period Paolozzi also established a reputation abroad. His work was shown at the Venice Biennale of 1952, in New Images of Man at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, in 1959, and at Documents in Kassel the same year. In 1960 there was a retrospective at the British Pavilion at the Venice Biennale.

By then his sculpture had begun to change. A visiting professor at the school of art in Hamburg between 1960 and 1962 (where he taught Stuart Sutcliffe, one of the original Beatles), Paolozzi regularly visited the dry docks, collecting discarded components from the wrecking yards. He used these, together with standard engineering parts ordered from catalogues, to create sculptures which simultaneously suggested curious machines and totems from some lost but technologically advanced culture. The earliest were cast in bronze, but later examples were made by welding. Some were painted in bright colours so as to emphasise the geometric elements of which they were composed. Many were constructed at an engineering works near Ipswich with which Paolozzi remained associated for several years. The craftsmen there showed him the advantages of working with assistants, and from then on he regularly employed model makers and other technicians at every stage of his sculptural production.

Paolozzi also treated printmaking with a new seriousness, and in 1965 created one of the masterpieces of pop art, As Is When - a portfolio of 12 screenprints improbably inspired by the life and work of the philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein. Based on elaborate collages, the prints employ fragments of texts, abstract patterns, pictures of aeroplanes and other machines, together with Disney characters. Other print portfolios followed, most notably Moonstrips Empire News (1967).

The 1960s were one of the most creative periods in Paolozzi's career. Towards the end of that decade, however, abstract sculptures in welded aluminium and chromium plated steel betrayed a decline in invention and originality. His prints also became repetitive, using the same images and ideas to the point of exhaustion. Some believed that slightly later works, designed to satirise minimalism and other then fashionable kinds of contemporary art, reflected a serious creative crisis. They dominated Paolozzi's only full retrospective in Britain - at the Tate Gallery in 1971 - which was a critical flop.

This was the lowest point in Paolozzi's artistic development. But he began to work with renewed energy in 1974 after being invited to live and work in West Berlin. There he spent almost two years creating several portfolios of ravishly beautiful abstract prints (especially Calcium Night Light) and a number of impressive reliefs assembled from small, standardised wooden elements. Some were later cast in bronze.

Paolozzi loved Germany. He was exhilarated by the dynamism of its cities and the high regard in which artists were held. He also relished the attention given him by German critics and collectors. Between 1977 and 1981 he was a professor at the Cologne Fachhochschole and, then, more happily, at the Munich Academy where he taught until regulations forced him to retire in 1994.

However he retained his London studio, continued to teach part time at the Royal College of Art (which had first appointed him in 1968), and regularly flew back and forth between Heathrow and Munich, always accompanied by copious suitcases stuffed with plaster maquettes, sketchbooks and the makings of collages. In Munich he would sleep at the Academy on a camp bed in his cluttered studio and eat, usually surrounded by admiring students, at a local pizzeria.

Commissions for public sculptures multiplied, first in Germany and then in Britain. Paolozzi made doors for the Hunterian Museum in Glasgow, an abstract monument for Euston Square in London, and mosaic decorations for Tottenham Court Road Underground station. He also created a large sculpture for the headquarters of the Royal Bank of Scotland in Edinburgh, and a bronze figure of Newton for the main entrance of the British Library.

The last two works revealed a growing interest in classicism which had begun in Munich where Paolozzi frequently visited the Glyptothek, the outstanding collection of Greek and Roman statuary. But even Paolozzi's neoclassical heads and figures continued to employ collage and assemblage. Constructed from unconnected fragments or cut into sections before being rearranged, many of them appear mechanistic, as though informed by a classicising aesthetic modified to reflect a modern distrust of absolute values.

Powerful though it is (and, in its eclectic, postmodernist use of allusion, very much of its time), the work of Paolozzi's last period lacks the freshness and startling originality of the sculpture and prints of the 1950s and 1960s. Yet it is on them, no doubt, that his considerable artistic reputation will continue to rest.

As a man, Paolozzi was a mixture of childlike enthusiasm, unquenchable curiosity and powerful intelligence. He could grasp the essence of a book or the argument of a scholarly article from a few hastily read paragraphs. He was at ease with complex abstract ideas. Always impressively well informed about the latest trends in music, the theatre and cinema, in his studio he listened constantly to BBC Radio 3 which, as he put it, had been his only education. He tried to keep in shape with the aid of judo (he was a black belt), gymnastics, swimming and a variety of diets,yet he never seemed able to concentrate on anything for long.

Those who knew him rarely saw Paolozzi at work. His day seemed to consist of diversions. He would flip idly through magazines or folders filled with clippings, go for a drink at the Chelsea Arts Club close to his studio, for lunch to the Royal College of Art, or for dinner to one of the several restaurants where, thanks to gifts of his sculpture or prints, he never saw a bill. But he was prodigiously productive nevertheless, working for several hours very early in the morning and again late at night when he knew he would not be interrupted. Remarkably generous to his friends, to whom he would casually hand out artists' proofs of prints like sweets, Paolozzi was nevertheless subject to dark moods during which he could be woundingly insensitive. During his career he was represented by very few dealers and stayed with none of them for long.

Paolozzi was made a CBE in 1968, an RA in 1979, and a knight in 1989; he was awarded numerous honorary doctorates, one by Cambridge University where he was also an honorary fellow of Jesus College; he was even a member of the Athenaeum. Such recognition delighted him - he was especially pleased to appear on Desert Island Discs for which he had long prepared his list of records.

Discreet about his private life, Paolozzi was attractive to women. Apart from his wife, three were important to him: the collector Gabrielle Keiller, the Berlin art dealer Helga Retscher, and Marlee Robinson, who acted as his personal assistant for more than a decade and arranged for him to fill the vacant, Ruritanian post of Queen's Sculptor in Ordinary for Scotland which partly ensured his knighthood. She also organised Paolozzi's defence after his wife, to his surprise and shock, brought divorce proceedings in 1988.

Towards the end of his life Paolozzi became increasingly concerned about his posthumous reputation. Eager to shape it, he began to write an autobiography, which he was unable to finish. He also donated countless prints and sculptures to museums in Britain and abroad. There is no doubt that he relished every visible sign of his eminence, especially from Scotland. His emotional attachment to Edinburgh became increasingly evident during the last years of his life.

In 1994 he offered a large quantity of his works to the national galleries of Scotland The Dean Gallery in Edinburgh, which opened in 1999, contains his works in many media: his large and bewilderingly varied library; a reconstruction of his fascinatingly chaotic London studio; and examples of the Surrealist art from the collections of Roland Penrose and Gabrielle Keiller, which crucially inspired Paolozzi at every point of his career.

He is survived by his three daughters, Louise, Anna and Emma.

· Eduardo Luigi Paolozzi, sculptor and print maker, born March 7 1924; died April 22 2005

Frank Whitford

The GuardianTramp

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