Metal master: Bob Dylan’s iron gates on show

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A detail from one of the iron work art pieces on display during a press preview event of artworks by American singer songwriter Bob Dylan, entitled Mood Swings, at the Halcyon Gallery in London Thursday Nov. 14, 2013. The exhibition of new artworks by Dylan, includes iron works alongside paintings which are exhibited and on sale from the gallery. (AP Photo / Yui Mok, PA) UNITED KINGDOM OUT – NO SALES – NO ARCHIVES
Bob Dylan: Mood Swings exhibition

A photo of Bob Dylan is displayed near one of his art pieces entitled, Ironwork Table 1, during a press preview event of artworks by American singer songwriter Bob Dylan, entitled Mood Swings, at the Halcyon Gallery in London Thursday Nov. 14, 2013. The exhibition of new artworks by Dylan, includes iron works alongside paintings which are exhibited and on sale from the gallery. (AP Photo / Yui Mok, PA) UNITED KINGDOM OUT – NO SALES – NO ARCHIVES
Bob Dylan: Mood Swings exhibition

A member of the gallery staff poses next to an iron gate called ‘Untitled VI’ during a press preview event of artworks by American singer songwriter Bob Dylan, entitled Mood Swings, at the Halcyon Gallery in London Thursday Nov. 14, 2013. The exhibition of new artworks by Dylan, includes iron works alongside paintings which are exhibited and on sale from the gallery. (AP Photo / Yui Mok, PA) UNITED KINGDOM OUT – NO SALES – NO ARCHIVES
Bob Dylan: Mood Swings exhibition

A detail from one of the pieces on display during a press preview event of artworks by American singer songwriter Bob Dylan, entitled Mood Swings, at the Halcyon Gallery in London Thursday Nov. 14, 2013. The exhibition of new artworks by Dylan, includes iron works alongside paintings which are exhibited and on sale from the gallery. (AP Photo / Yui Mok, PA) UNITED KINGDOM OUT – NO SALES – NO ARCHIVES

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LONDON (AP) — Bob Dylan is highlighting the iron in his soul in an art exhibition in London.

The show at the Halcyon Gallery features iron gates and sculptures by the musician, who has said that his early years in Minnesota’s “iron-ore country” sparked a lifelong fascination with metal.

The “Mood Swings” show includes seven iron gates welded by Dylan from scrap iron and other metal parts, including a wrench, a roller skate, a meat grinder and lawn tools.

Gallery president Paul Green said Thursday that Dylan had “taken objects from an industrial past and resurrected them, making them live again.”

The exhibition also includes paintings and car doors full of bullet holes alongside newspaper reports about underworld icons including Pretty Boy Floyd and Machine Gun Kelly.

The exhibition runs until Jan. 25

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