Wikipedia talk:Featured article candidates/Sutton Hoo Helmet (sculpture)/archive1

TFA blurb review
Sutton Hoo Helmet is a 2002 sculpture by the English artist Rick Kirby. A representation of the Anglo-Saxon helmet of the same name found in the Sutton Hoo ship-burial, it was commissioned by the National Trust to hang outside the Sutton Hoo visitor centre. Together with the centre, the sculpture was unveiled by Nobel laureate Seamus Heaney on 13 March 2002. The sculpture weighs 900 kg and is 1.8 m high, 1.2 m wide and 1.6 m deep. It is made of mild steel plates that are coloured red. Designed by the artist to have a "fierce presence", it is inspired by the fragmentary appearance of the reconstructed helmet rather than the glistening replica made by the Royal Armouries. Steel is Kirby's material of choice, for what he describes as "the ability to go huge". The sculpture is illustrative of his largely figural body of work, and its mask-like quality has been repeated in subsequent pieces.

Just a suggested blurb ... thoughts and edits are welcome. - Dank (push to talk) 15:09, 26 June 2019 (UTC)

Wehwalt will be running this at TFA in September. I just looked at the lead again, and came up with something a little different based on the current lead ... I have no preference:

Sutton Hoo Helmet is a 2002 sculpture by the English artist Rick Kirby. A representation of the Anglo-Saxon helmet of the same name found in the Sutton Hoo ship-burial, it was commissioned by the National Trust to hang outside the Sutton Hoo visitor centre. Together with the centre, the sculpture was unveiled by Nobel laureate Seamus Heaney on 13 March 2002. Weighing 900 kg, it is 1.8 m high, 1.2 m wide and 1.6 m deep. It is made of mild steel plates that are coloured red. Designed to have a "fierce presence", it is inspired by the fragmentary appearance of the reconstructed helmet rather than the glistening replica made by the Royal Armouries. Steel is Kirby's favoured medium, allowing the sense of scale and dramatic impact found in Sutton Hoo Helmet. The sculpture is illustrative of Kirby's largely figural body of work, and its mask-like quality has been repeated in subsequent pieces. - Dank (push to talk) 00:45, 19 August 2019 (UTC)