Jobe Burns is a British artist working across sculpture, space and installation. Rooted in the material language of industry and land, his practice explores what it means to be human today. Through steel, stone and soil, he stages encounters between the built and the grown, creating works that invite reflection and return sculpture to embodied experience. This work uses remnants of Britain’s rural and industrial past, including a beam, steel rebar and an 18th-century cast iron plough blade, recontextualised as sculpture. Referencing the Enclosure Movement, it reflects on land, labour and displacement within British history and landscape.