SLEEK joins them for a tête-à-tête ahead of their new exhibition at Blain Southern London.
Have your reasons for making art changed over the years?
You weren’t directly part of the original YBA movement, but you’re so often associated with it. Why?
Tim Noble Because it was a necessity. We needed to be part of it, get verbalised, be a contender. There was no other way. We had to find a place to do a show, invite people round, receive loads of criticism and get beaten up. It was an explosive time.
SW It was one massive party, with lots of fights. Now everyone’s made loads of money. The good ones are still around. Time is a good test, isn’t it?
Your latest work is a significant departure from your trademark light and dark sculptures…
SW I was messing around with this tiny maquette that Tim had made from electrical wire while we were doing a residency in St. Bart’s 10 years ago. It was a self-portrait of us. Suddenly, I wondered what it would look like blown-up three metres high.
There’s a fluidity and volatility to the works that, given their three-metre tall stature, is quite an achievement…
SW The original maquettes are hand- made, so we were effectively drawing with the wire. It’s got all of that spontaneity. Even though we scaled them up in bronze, they’ve still got that freshness.
TN That’s the essence of it. To have that raw, handmade, human feel. Fabrication and production can re- ally kill things. These stick figures are naked; they’re having a laugh.
What did you find most challenging or surprising about the works?
SW They started off in neon, but during production we had problems. So we tried them in bronze instead, and suddenly it started to work. It started off quite pop and ended up feeling traditional. We used the lost wax process – an ancient method of casting – you make the sculpture in wax, it gets wrapped in a shell and then the wax gets replaced by molten metal.
TN: We got a structural engineer to help us figure out how to make them massive, without endangering anyone. We pushed it as far as we could. At first I thought they were really odd, then they took on their own identities.
Did this time of political upheaval act as a creative catalyst?
TN Not directly, but I feel as though artists have always thrived in adversity, so I think it’s an interesting time in that respect. It might really sharpen and shake up the art world.
SW That’s why the UK has always produced such fantastic creative people, because we’ve always had the royal family – something to kick against.
A new punk movement, perhaps?
TN Obviously punk only exists during a certain time. But, maybe that’s now. Maybe you and I are part of it. Maybe it’s getting pent up and ready to explode!

“STICKS WITH DICKS AND SLITS” is on display at Blain|Southern London from 3 February until 25 March 2017