Gormley's career began with a solo exhibition at the
Whitechapel Gallery in 1981. In this exhibition, Gormley showed a series of works that were concerned with surfaces, skins and inner structures, such as
Natural Selection, a row of objects, including tools, fruits, weapons and vegetables, encased in lead, and
Room, an enclosure reminiscent of a barbed-wire fence made from a set of the artist's clothes. Gormley then turned his attention to the human body, creating moulds of his own body in plaster that he would then encase in lead. These works, such as the three-part sculptures
Three Ways: Mould Hole and Passage and
Land Sea and Air II, as well as the single body-case works
Plateau,
Night and
Peer, attempt to investigate the body as a space. In Gormley's words: "How to make bodies into vessels that both contain and occupy space? The early three-piece lead works are the first works in which I used my own body. I was trying to map out the phenomenology of the body and to find a new way of evoking it as being less a thing, more a place; a site of transformation, and an axis of physical and spatial experience." Throughout the 1980s, Gormley's lead body-cases were extended, suspended, sealed, pierced and also doubled into two joined forms. Gormley describes his work as "an attempt to materialise the place at the other side of appearance where we all live." His work attempts to treat the body not as an object, but as a place and in making works that enclose the space of a particular body to identify a condition common to all human beings. The work is not symbolic but indexical – a trace of a real event of a real body in time. In the 1990s, the hollow body-cases became solid, with Gormley casting the work in iron to create masses that displace space. One of these works,
Critical Mass II, was installed in an old tram storage station in
Vienna. This work has since been exhibited in a variety of countries and contexts, each time reconfigured in response to its environment. Notable presentations include the
Royal Academy of Arts in
London, Art Changsha in China and
Forte di Belvedere in
Florence, Italy. The 2006
Sydney Biennale featured Gormley's
Asian Field, an installation of approximately 200,000 small clay figurines crafted by around 300 Chinese villagers in five days from 100 tons of red clay. Use of others' works attracted minor comment. Some figurines were stolen. Also in 2006, the burning of Gormley's
The Waste Man formed the zenith of the
Margate Exodus. Other collaborative projects include
Clay and the Collective Body,
Inside Australia,
Domain Field and Gormley's ongoing
Field works, including
Asian Field,
Amazonian Field,
American Field,
Field for the Art Gallery of New South Wales and
Field for the British Isles. In July 2009, Gormley presented
One & Other, a
Fourth Plinth commission, an invitation for members of the public, chosen by lot, to spend one hour on the vacant plinth in Trafalgar Square in London. Throughout the 2000s, Gormley has interrogated the relationship between the human body and architecture, notably in his series of steel and iron "Blockworks". In these works, Gormley replaces anatomy with architectural blocks that recall the built environment. From 2 June–9 September 2012,
The Phillips Collection exhibited
Antony Gormley Drawing Space. It was his first U.S. museum exhibition of his works on paper; the exhibit "... included approximately 80 prints and drawings created over 40 years." In March 2014, Gormley appeared in the
BBC Four series
What Do Artists Do All Day? in an episode that followed his team and him in their Kings Cross studio, preparing a new work – a group of 60 enormous steel figures – called
Expansion Field. In May 2015 five life-sized sculptures,
Land, were placed near the centre and at four compass points of the UK in a commission by the
Landmark Trust to celebrate its 50th anniversary. They are at
Lowsonford (
Warwickshire),
Lundy (
Bristol Channel),
Saddell Bay (
Scotland),
the Martello Tower (
Aldeburgh, Suffolk), and
Clavell Tower (
Kimmeridge Bay, Dorset). The Dorset sculpture was knocked over into Kimmeridge Bay by a storm in September 2015. On 6 September 2015,
Another Place marked the 10th anniversary of its installation at
Crosby Beach in
Merseyside. Gormley commented: In September 2015, Gormley had his first sculpture installed in New Zealand.
Stay is a group of identical cast-iron human form sculptures, with the first installed in the
Avon River / Ōtākaro in
Christchurch's
central city, and the other sculpture installed in the nearby
Arts Centre in early 2016. In 2015 at the
Forte di Belvedere in
Florence, Gormley presented a group of cast iron works that acted as points of "acupuncture" throughout the historical fortress. Gormley returned to Florence in 2018 with the exhibition
Essere at the
Uffizi Gallery. The exhibition featured both historical and recent work, notably
Room from 1980,
Sense from 1991 and
Passage from 2016. In 2017 Gormley curated
Inside, an exhibition at the
Southbank Centre, London, presented by the
Koestler Trust showing artworks by prisoners, detainees, and ex-offenders. In addition, he judged their annual category prize, also on the theme "inside". Gormley then held the first solo exhibition at the newly remodelled
Kettle's Yard in
Cambridge. Two new bodies of work, known as
Rooters and
Polyhedra Works, were shown that year at
White Cube in
Hong Kong and
Thaddaeus Ropac in
Salzburg, respectively. On 21 April 2018, Gormley released a limited edition vinyl album of ambient sounds from his studio for
Record Store Day titled
Sounds of the Studio. It consisted of two tracks (one on each side) titled
Sounds of the Studio (Part 1) and
Sounds of the Studio (Part 2). It came with an inner with a
monochrome print of his studio on one side and text by the artist with a photo on the other. In 2019 Gormley populated the island of
Delos with iron "bodyforms" with the exhibition
Sight. and presented in collaboration with the Ephorate of Antiquities of
Cyclades, the project marked the first time that an artist took over the archaeological site of Delos since the island was inhabited more than 5,000 years ago, and is the first time a contemporary art installation has been unanimously approved by the Greek Archaeological Council of the
Ministry of Culture to take place in Delos, a
UNESCO World Heritage Site. He installed 29 sculptures made during the last 20 years, including five new works specially commissioned by the NEON Organization, both at the periphery and integrated amongst Delos's archaeological site and museum, animating the geological and archaeological features of the island. Also in 2019, the Royal Academy held an exhibition filling its 13 main galleries with Gormley's works, including some new (designed to fit the space), some remade for the gallery, and some of his early sculptures, with two rooms of his drawings and sketchbooks. In 2020 Gormley was confirmed to be "lending" a sculpture to
Kirklees College to sit atop its new building at Pioneer House in
Dewsbury, as part of a major redevelopment in the town. In 2022 a Gormley sculpture called
Alert was installed on the main campus of
Imperial College London. The installation raised objections from the student body due to its perceived "phallic" interpretation. That year, Gormley also held exhibitions at
Xavier Hufkens in
Brussels,
Lehmbruck Museum in
Duisburg, Germany and
Museum Voorlinden in
Wassenaar, the Netherlands. In Duisburg, his work was placed in dialogue with
Wilhelm Lehmbruck's expressionistic, elongated sculptures. Gormley's
Reflection II has remained on display at the museum. In 2023 Gormley opened a number of large-scale exhibitions, including
Living Time at TAG Art Museum in
Qingdao, China, and
Critical Mass at
Musée Rodin in
Paris, which marked the first time that a living artist has been invited to exhibit in all areas of the museum, including the
Hôtel Biron. As part of the exhibition, Gormley showed his major artwork
Critical Mass II, a sculpture comprising 60 cast iron bodies, in and around the museum and its grounds. Inside the Hôtel Biron, Gormley placed four sculptures in dialogue with Rodin's own work and also selected a number of his working models to be seen alongside Rodin's plaster maquettes. Later in the year, Gormley opened
Body Politic at
White Cube in London, a solo exhibition of new sculptures responding to themes of movement and containment, as well as the topic of migration. As part of the exhibition, a new installation,
Resting Place, filled a room with 244 bodies built from fired bricks, and a row of what the artist calls concrete "bunkers" ran down the gallery's central corridor. In 2024
Time Horizon, an installation of 100 cast iron sculptures, opened at
Houghton Hall in
Norfolk. The installation responded to the specific landscape of the parkland and the history of the hall. Gormley also unveiled
True, for Alan Turing at
King's College, Cambridge. This sculpture, made from slabs of Corten steel, celebrates the life and enduring influence of mathematician and computer scientist
Alan Turing. Speaking on the sculpture, Gormley stated "Alan Turing unlocked the door between the industrial and the information ages. I wanted to make the best sculpture I could to honour a man who was pivotal in changing the course of all our lives. It is not about the memorialisation of a death, but about a celebration of the opportunities that a life allowed". Gormley's first solo exhibition in
New York City in more than eight years opened at
White Cube and ran until June 2024. The artist exhibited a new site-specific installation titled
Aerial, from which the exhibition took its name. This sculpture was made from horizontal and vertical aluminium bars that filled the room like "whiskers" and visitors were invited to enter and find their way through this space. In the spring of 2025 Gormley returned to Delos with
Rule II, a donation along with
NEON Organization, following an invitation by the Ministry of Culture. The sculpture is the first contemporary artwork to be permanently exhibited in an archaeological site in Greece and is placed outdoors at the Archaeological Museum of Delos facing the archaeological site. From 13 September 2025 to 4 January 2026, the
Nasher Sculpture Center in Dallas is exhibiting
Survey: Antony Gormley, the first major exhibition of his work in the United States. The exhibit spanned the breath of Gormley's work. In conjunction with the exhibit, Gormley installed works on the rooftops of skyscrapers in and around downtown Dallas. ==Recognition==