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Gillian Wearing

Gillian Wearing CBE, RA (born 10 December 1963) is an English conceptual artist, one of the Young British Artists, and winner of the 1997 Turner Prize. In 2007 Wearing was elected as lifetime member of the Royal Academy of Arts in London.[1] Her statue of the suffragist Millicent Fawcett, popularly known as "Hanging out the washing", stands in London's Parliament Square.[2]

Gillian Wearing
CBE, RA
Gillian Wearing, in the IVAM, València, 2015.
Born (1963-12-10) 10 December 1963 (age 60)
Birmingham, England
NationalityBritish
EducationGoldsmiths
Known forConceptual art, installation art
MovementYoung British Artists
AwardsTurner Prize

From 5 November 2021 to 4 April 2022, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York City showed Gillian Wearing: Wearing Masks, the first retrospective of Wearing's work in North America.[3][4]

Early life edit

Wearing was born in 1963 in Birmingham, England.[5] She attended Dartmouth High School in Great Barr, Birmingham. She moved to Chelsea, London to study art at the Chelsea School of Art and squatted in Oval Mansions.[6] In 1987 she attained a bachelor of technology degree in art and design and in 1990 she attained a BFA from Goldsmiths, University of London.[5]

Art practice edit

Wearing is known for her method of documentation of everyday life through photography and video, concerning individual identity within the private and the public spaces, where Wearing blurs the line between reality and fiction.[7] John Slyce has described Wearing's method of representation as "frame[ing] herself as she frames the other".[8] Her work in photography and video at first appear like most other journalistic methods of documentation seen in television and documentaries, but after further examination it becomes apparent that they do not conform to mass-media conventions.[9] Wearing's work reveals that the camera does not take a neutral stance towards its object, but is rather a powerful mass-media organ that breaks down the divide between public and private.[9] In the early 1990s, Wearing began putting together photography exhibitions where she worked with strangers. There is a recurring pattern in her work where she plays and mocks the idea of the artist as anthropologist, but her anthropological activities do not focus on discovering a foreign culture but instead challenges what we thought we already knew.[10] Wearing sees that Anthropology "attempts to compress human subjectivity into scientific objectivity".[11] As John Slyce puts it: "Gillian Wearing does not suffer the indignity of speaking for others.".[12] How Wearing approaches her subjects then is by inviting the individual to include their own articulation of thought into the picture within the space that she has provided, rather than an objective documentation.[11] In an interview with Donna De Salvo, Wearing states:

"For me, one of the biggest problems with pure documentary photography is how the photographer, like the artist, engineers something to look like a certain kind of social statement—for instance, you can make someone look miserable, when this is just one side, a nuance of their personality. They might just be looking away at something, but their expression could be read as showing a kind of depression in their overall behavior. I couldn't bear the idea of taking photographs of people without knowing".[13]

Signs that say what you want them to say and not Signs that say what someone else wants you to say (1992–1993) edit

In her piece Signs that say what you want them to say and not Signs that say what someone else wants you to say (1992–1993), Wearing conducted a series of portraits wherein she approached strangers that she encountered on the street, and asked them to write what they were thinking about on a placard. Wearing stated that "When they returned with something they had written, it challenged [her] own perception of them".[14] Through this exercise, people of different backgrounds, religions, ages and social statuses become unified through the art practise as "all of a sudden you have to start re-appraising people."[13] The audience's fantasies of imposing their own interpretations onto these photographed subjects are challenged and redirected by the paper that they are holding.[10] This exchange between Wearing and the subjects she photographed transformed the typically alienating portrait photography practise into an intimate conversational piece, linking photographer with subject, and audience with photographer.[15]

Mask edit

In Russell Ferguson's "Show Your Emotions" he draws Wearing's use of mask draws to an older tradition that runs back to at least as far as classical Greek tragedy: "One in which the mask functions not so much to substitute one identity for another as to obliterate the superficial aspects of physical appearance in order to reveal more fundamental truths".[16] In Confess all on video. Don't worry you will be in disguise. Intrigued? Call Gillian (1994) is a 30-minute long video where Wearing recruited strangers through posting an ad in Time out magazine and provided a space where participants would confess their terrors and fantasies to the camera, their identity protected by costume masks.[17] The mask is a reoccurring device in Wearing's work and it functions as protection as well as an apparatus that empowers the wearer; by making their identities anonymous it allows them to express their identity without constraint.[11] As the viewer, access to truth becomes dislocated.[8] Wearing presents this fictitious nature of the work as a report.[9] The use of masks also questions authenticity and how reality can be fabricated.[8] as said by Doris Krystof:

"Protected by masks, protected by their anonymity and protect by the free realm of art where their confessions are recorded but not judged, where there are no consequences to fear, no ideology or attempted appropriation to deal with, the participants could enjoy a sense of liberation and trust in their own voices."[18]

Trauma (2000) is a further exploration of confessing with a mask. The eight participants confess their trauma and the mask that is given reflects the age when they suffered their trauma, with the intention of transporting the viewer back to "the defining moment in the wearer's lives".[18] What's intriguing about this piece is that it seems like that it's not the first time that the participants have told their story because of how well rehearsed it looks.[18] But that's not the case, it might be that they have been reciting the trauma that they have experienced in their heads over many years.[18]

In Homage to the woman with the bandaged face who I saw yesterday down Walworth Road (1995), Wearing covers her head with white bandages and walks around in public.[10] This piece materialized after Wearing caught a glimpse of a woman she saw with a bandaged head while in her friend's car.[19] Wearing initially wanted to ask for permission to film the woman, although she decided to cover her own face with bandages and reenact what she had seen instead.[19] Her walk was documented discreetly from behind and there was a hidden camera installed inside of the mask, capturing onlookers' horrid reactions. Krystof Doris contextualizes Wearing's approach: "The relationship between observer and observed is first established, then reversed, but always recounted from the perspective of the artist." [19] In 2003-2006, Gillian Wearing recreated photographs of her relatives that were found in her family album.[20] She created masks out of silicone of her mother, her father, her sister, her uncle, and a mask of herself with help from experts that were trained at Madam Tussauds in London.[19] They start creating the mask in clay from a two-dimensional image into a three-dimensional object.[20] In an article for The Guardian she explains that the process takes four months per mask, and how at first "some people tried to direct me to use prosthetics, but I was adamant it had to be a mask, something that transforms me entirely, something that was not grotesque but real, like a trompe l'oeil".[19] These expensive silicone masks deteriorate easily after use, turning the photo shoot into a performative act where the action is unrepeatable.[19] This process becomes paradoxical because of the difficulties that are encountered while recreating these casual snapshots.[19] This work references into the canonical work in the history of photography of Cindy Sherman, though Wearing has shifted the focus to exploring her own persona and its underlying relationships as a social construct.[19] The works in Album then do not necessarily put the family members as the main focus; rather they capture Wearing's engagement with the family members.[19]

Turner Prize edit

"60 Minutes Silence (1996)" is the piece that won Wearing the Turner Prize in 1997.[21] Wearing used a fixed camera and the length of the pose was long in duration, which resulted in an awkward personal moment.[7] At first the image appears like a backlit group portrait of British police officers but after further examination the slight movements that they make reveals that it is in fact a video.[7] In Krystof Doris' text "Masks, Identity, and Performativity" he explains that the power relation between the viewer and the viewed (the police officers) are reversed due to the disciplining scenario that Wearing placed upon the group of police officers.[19] The individuality of each member begins to assert itself as the recording goes on and the officers conclusively become "ordinary human beings".[19]

1990s edit

In the early 1990s, Wearing started putting together photography exhibitions that were based around the idea of photographing anonymous strangers in the street who she had asked to hold up a piece of paper with a message on it. Of these "confessional" pieces, Wearing stated,

I decided that I wanted people to feel protected when they talked about certain things in their life that they wouldn't want the public that knows them to know. I can understand that sort of holding on to things—it's kind of part of British society to hold things in. I always think of Britain as being a place where you're meant to keep your secrets—you should never tell your neighbors or tell anyone. Things are changing now, because the culture's changed and the Internet has brought people out. We have Facebook and Twitter where people tell you small details of their life.[22]

One of Wearing's first UK shows was held at the Chisenhale Gallery in east London, in June 1997.

In 1997, Wearing won the Turner Prize and exhibited videos such as 60 minutes silence which is a video of 26 uniformed police officers, but at first appears to be a photograph. Wearing said, "The piece is about authority, restraint, and control." She also exhibited Sacha and Mum showing emotions between a mother and daughter. Wearing described the piece as, "Things can not be finalized—- as far as emotions are concerned. They're always in turmoil and can go to two polar opposites." Cornelia Parker, Christine Borland and Angela Bulloch were the other shortlisted artists.[23]

In the late 1990s, Wearing made a three-channel video called Drunk (1997-1999), for which she filmed a group of street drinkers who she had got to know outside her studio against the backdrop of a white photographic backdrop. The drinkers are shown in different scenes individually and in groups. They stagger around, fall over, bicker, fight, sleep and in the end one of the men stands against the backdrop and urinates.

2000s edit

In Wearing's Broad Street (2001), she documents the behavior of typical teenagers in British society who go out at night and drink large amounts of alcohol. Wearing shows teenagers partying at various clubs and bars along Broad Street, Birmingham. Wearing follows these teenagers demonstrating how alcohol contributes to their loss of inhibitions, insecurities, and control.[24]

In 2003, Wearing caused controversy with her cover for The Guardian's G2 supplement, consisting solely of the handwritten words "Fuck Cilla Black".[25] The cover illustrated an article by Stuart Jeffries complaining about the cruelty of modern television.

The themes of modern television were further explored in Wearing's project Family History (2006) commissioned by Film and Video Umbrella, and accompanied by a publication on the project.[26]

2010s edit

 
A Real Birmingham Family

Wearing's 2010 show People (2005–2011) at Tanya Bonakdar Gallery included work ranging from video, to photographic portraiture, to installation and sculpture. Snapshot (2005) is a series of seven single-projection videos framed by a candy-colored array of plasma screens, each depicting different stages of the female life cycle—from the innocence of early childhood to old age.[27]

Wearing also released her first feature film in this year: Self Made. Film theorist David Deamer writes that the film 'is a paradox. And it is the nature of the paradox that gives the film its power [...] The paradox emerges indirectly, a consequence of the two modes of narration of the film. First mode: documentary. The participants – through their facilitator, Sam Rumbelow – explore the techniques of "the method", method acting, which will allow them to encounter themselves anew and so generate their own "self-made" film. In this way each participant goes on to star in their own short, which, while encompassed by director Gillian Wearing's documentary, appears as its own moment of narration. So, second mode: fiction'.[28]

Wearing was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 2011 Birthday Honours for services to art.[29] In the same year, she was among the names in Blake Gopnik's list "The 10 Most Important Artists of Today".[30]

In 2012, a major retrospective of her work was held at Whitechapel Gallery, London (March–June 2012), which surveyed her career and premiered new films and sculptures.[31] The exhibition was organised with Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen, Düsseldorf and supported by Maja Hoffmann, Vicky Hughes and John Smith, and Dr Naomi Milgrom AO.[31] An accompanying monograph was published by Ridinghouse and included texts by curator Daniel Herrmann, Doris Krystof, Bernhart Schwenk and David Deamer.[32]

In 2013, Wearing showed her exhibit People: Selected Parkett Artists' Editions from 1984 to 2013 Parkett Space, Zurich, Switzerland (9 February-11 March 2013).[33]

On 30 October 2014 her sculpture A Real Birmingham Family was unveiled in front of the Library of Birmingham.[34]

On 24 April 2018, her statue of the suffragist Millicent Fawcett was unveiled in London's Parliament Square; it is the first statue of a woman in Parliament Square.[2] This makes Wearing the first woman to create a statue that is in Parliament Square.[35]

2020s edit

From November 5, 2021 to April 4, 2022, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York City was showing Gillian Wearing: Wearing Masks, the first retrospective of Wearing's work in North America.[3][4]

Personal life edit

Wearing lives and works in London with her partner, British artist Michael Landy.[36]

Awards edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Gillian Wearing". www.royalacademy.org.uk. Retrieved 16 November 2018.
  2. ^ a b "Millicent Fawcett: Statue of suffragist to be unveiled in London". BBC. 24 April 2018. Retrieved 24 April 2018.
  3. ^ a b Woodward, Richard B. (19 January 2022). "'Gillian Wearing: Wearing Masks' Review: Turning a New Eye on the 'I'". Wall Street Journal. ISSN 0099-9660. Retrieved 13 February 2022.
  4. ^ a b Heinrich, Will (18 November 2021). "Gillian Wearing Is Spilling Your Secrets". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 13 February 2022.
  5. ^ Myers, Ben (3 September 2018). "Criminalising squatters will hurt British pop music". The Guardian. Retrieved 28 December 2013.
  6. ^ a b c Molon, Dominic (2002). Observing the Masses. Chicago: IL: Museum of Contemporary Art.
  7. ^ a b c Naime, Sandy; Howgate, Sarah; Graham-Dixon, Andrew; Fidell, Jo (2013). 21st Century Portraits. London: National Portrait Gallery. pp. 72–74.
  8. ^ a b c Schumacher, Rainald; Winzen, Mathias (2003). Just Love Me: Post/Feminist Positions of the 1990s from the Goetz Collection.
  9. ^ a b c Ferguson, Russel (1999). Show Your Emotions : Gillian Wearing (print ed.). London: Phaidon. pp. 34–68.
  10. ^ a b c O'Reilly, Sally, "Gillian Wearing", Art Review 58, Art Source
  11. ^ Slyce, John (1999). "10-16, Life under the Conditions of Art" Gillian Wearing. London: Phaidon. pp. 72–86.
  12. ^ a b M, De Salvo Dona (1999). "In Conversation with Gillian Wearing" Gillian Wearing. London: Phaidon. pp. 1–31.
  13. ^ Fowler, Catherine (2013). Once More with Feeling: Performing the Self in the Work of Gilian Wearing, Kutlug Ataman, and Phil Collins. MIRAJ, Moving Image Review & Art Journal. pp. 10–14.
  14. ^ O'Reilly, Sally, "Gillian Wearing", Art Review 58, Art Source, p. 67
  15. ^ Ferguson, Russel (1999). Show Your Emotions : Gillian Wearing (print ed.). London: Phaidon. p. 38.
  16. ^ Hodge, David. "Confess All on Video. Don't Worry You Will Be In Disguise. Intrigued? Call Gillian Version II, Gillian Wearing OBE 1994". TATE.
  17. ^ a b c d Doris, Krystof (2012). "Masks, Identity, and Performativity." Gillian Wearing. London: Whitechapel Gallery. p. 13.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Doris, Krystof (2012). "Masks, Identity, and Performativity." Gillian Wearing. London: Whitechapel Gallery. pp. 9–29.
  19. ^ a b Wearing, Gillian (27 March 2012). "Gillian Wearing Takeover: Behind The Mask - The Self Portraits". The Guardian.
  20. ^ a b "Turner Prize: A Retrospective 1984 – 2006: 96–97". Tate.org.uk. Retrieved 13 October 2022.
  21. ^ Corwin, William. (September 2012). 'In Conversation: Gillian Wearing with William Corwin' Brooklyn Rail. Retrieved 29 December 2013.
  22. ^ Flannery, M. & Preece, R.J. (1998).'Turner Prize 1997: Generating art debate'. World Sculpture News, 4(1), 28-30. Retrieved 29 December 2013.
  23. ^ Martin, Sylvia: "Broad Street", Video Art, page 94. Taschen, 2006.
  24. ^ Katz, Ian. (8 January 2003). "Were we right to do this?". The Guardian. Retrieved 29 December 2013.
  25. ^ Wearing, Gillian (2007). Family history. London: Film and Video Umbrella. ISBN 978-1904270232.
  26. ^ Rooney, Kara L. (June 2011). "Gillian Wearing: People". The Brooklyn Rail.
  27. ^ Deamer, David (2016). Deleuze's Cinema Books: Three Introductions to the Taxonomy of Images. Edinburgh University Press. pp. 309–313.
  28. ^ "No. 59808". The London Gazette (Supplement). 11 June 2011. p. 13.
  29. ^ Gopnik, Blake (5 June 2011). "The 10 Most Important Artists of Today". Newsweek. Retrieved 25 April 2021.
  30. ^ a b "Gillian Wearing", Whitechapel Gallery, Retrieved 20 November 2018.
  31. ^ "Gillian Wearing monograph". Ridinghouse.
  32. ^ Gillian Wearing Biography. regenprojects.com
  33. ^ Tyler, Jane (30 October 2014). "Library of Birmingham statue unveiling: Two mums immortalised in 'ordinary' family sculpture". Birmingham Mail. Retrieved 3 November 2014.
  34. ^ Rosa Silverman (24 April 2018). "Millicent Fawcett: Parliament Square's first female statue has a much bigger story to tell". The Telegraph. Telegraph.co.uk. Retrieved 24 April 2018.
  35. ^ Rachel Campbell-Johnston (7 October 2008). "Michael Landy – the man who had nothing". The Times. London. Retrieved 22 October 2008.
  36. ^ "Birmingham artist Gillian Wearing given top university honour" Birmingham City University. Accessed 7 October 2016

External links edit

  • Wearing interviewed by Leo Edelstein for the Journal of Contemporary Art
  • Wearing interviewed by Grady Turner for Bomb Magazine 14 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine

gillian, wearing, born, december, 1963, english, conceptual, artist, young, british, artists, winner, 1997, turner, prize, 2007, wearing, elected, lifetime, member, royal, academy, arts, london, statue, suffragist, millicent, fawcett, popularly, known, hanging. Gillian Wearing CBE RA born 10 December 1963 is an English conceptual artist one of the Young British Artists and winner of the 1997 Turner Prize In 2007 Wearing was elected as lifetime member of the Royal Academy of Arts in London 1 Her statue of the suffragist Millicent Fawcett popularly known as Hanging out the washing stands in London s Parliament Square 2 Gillian WearingCBE RAGillian Wearing in the IVAM Valencia 2015 Born 1963 12 10 10 December 1963 age 60 Birmingham EnglandNationalityBritishEducationGoldsmithsKnown forConceptual art installation artMovementYoung British ArtistsAwardsTurner Prize From 5 November 2021 to 4 April 2022 the Solomon R Guggenheim Museum in New York City showed Gillian Wearing Wearing Masks the first retrospective of Wearing s work in North America 3 4 Contents 1 Early life 2 Art practice 2 1 Signs that say what you want them to say and not Signs that say what someone else wants you to say 1992 1993 2 2 Mask 2 3 Turner Prize 2 4 1990s 2 5 2000s 2 6 2010s 2 7 2020s 3 Personal life 4 Awards 5 References 6 External linksEarly life editWearing was born in 1963 in Birmingham England 5 She attended Dartmouth High School in Great Barr Birmingham She moved to Chelsea London to study art at the Chelsea School of Art and squatted in Oval Mansions 6 In 1987 she attained a bachelor of technology degree in art and design and in 1990 she attained a BFA from Goldsmiths University of London 5 Art practice editWearing is known for her method of documentation of everyday life through photography and video concerning individual identity within the private and the public spaces where Wearing blurs the line between reality and fiction 7 John Slyce has described Wearing s method of representation as frame ing herself as she frames the other 8 Her work in photography and video at first appear like most other journalistic methods of documentation seen in television and documentaries but after further examination it becomes apparent that they do not conform to mass media conventions 9 Wearing s work reveals that the camera does not take a neutral stance towards its object but is rather a powerful mass media organ that breaks down the divide between public and private 9 In the early 1990s Wearing began putting together photography exhibitions where she worked with strangers There is a recurring pattern in her work where she plays and mocks the idea of the artist as anthropologist but her anthropological activities do not focus on discovering a foreign culture but instead challenges what we thought we already knew 10 Wearing sees that Anthropology attempts to compress human subjectivity into scientific objectivity 11 As John Slyce puts it Gillian Wearing does not suffer the indignity of speaking for others 12 How Wearing approaches her subjects then is by inviting the individual to include their own articulation of thought into the picture within the space that she has provided rather than an objective documentation 11 In an interview with Donna De Salvo Wearing states For me one of the biggest problems with pure documentary photography is how the photographer like the artist engineers something to look like a certain kind of social statement for instance you can make someone look miserable when this is just one side a nuance of their personality They might just be looking away at something but their expression could be read as showing a kind of depression in their overall behavior I couldn t bear the idea of taking photographs of people without knowing 13 Signs that say what you want them to say and not Signs that say what someone else wants you to say 1992 1993 edit In her piece Signs that say what you want them to say and not Signs that say what someone else wants you to say 1992 1993 Wearing conducted a series of portraits wherein she approached strangers that she encountered on the street and asked them to write what they were thinking about on a placard Wearing stated that When they returned with something they had written it challenged her own perception of them 14 Through this exercise people of different backgrounds religions ages and social statuses become unified through the art practise as all of a sudden you have to start re appraising people 13 The audience s fantasies of imposing their own interpretations onto these photographed subjects are challenged and redirected by the paper that they are holding 10 This exchange between Wearing and the subjects she photographed transformed the typically alienating portrait photography practise into an intimate conversational piece linking photographer with subject and audience with photographer 15 Mask edit In Russell Ferguson s Show Your Emotions he draws Wearing s use of mask draws to an older tradition that runs back to at least as far as classical Greek tragedy One in which the mask functions not so much to substitute one identity for another as to obliterate the superficial aspects of physical appearance in order to reveal more fundamental truths 16 In Confess all on video Don t worry you will be in disguise Intrigued Call Gillian 1994 is a 30 minute long video where Wearing recruited strangers through posting an ad in Time out magazine and provided a space where participants would confess their terrors and fantasies to the camera their identity protected by costume masks 17 The mask is a reoccurring device in Wearing s work and it functions as protection as well as an apparatus that empowers the wearer by making their identities anonymous it allows them to express their identity without constraint 11 As the viewer access to truth becomes dislocated 8 Wearing presents this fictitious nature of the work as a report 9 The use of masks also questions authenticity and how reality can be fabricated 8 as said by Doris Krystof Protected by masks protected by their anonymity and protect by the free realm of art where their confessions are recorded but not judged where there are no consequences to fear no ideology or attempted appropriation to deal with the participants could enjoy a sense of liberation and trust in their own voices 18 Trauma 2000 is a further exploration of confessing with a mask The eight participants confess their trauma and the mask that is given reflects the age when they suffered their trauma with the intention of transporting the viewer back to the defining moment in the wearer s lives 18 What s intriguing about this piece is that it seems like that it s not the first time that the participants have told their story because of how well rehearsed it looks 18 But that s not the case it might be that they have been reciting the trauma that they have experienced in their heads over many years 18 In Homage to the woman with the bandaged face who I saw yesterday down Walworth Road 1995 Wearing covers her head with white bandages and walks around in public 10 This piece materialized after Wearing caught a glimpse of a woman she saw with a bandaged head while in her friend s car 19 Wearing initially wanted to ask for permission to film the woman although she decided to cover her own face with bandages and reenact what she had seen instead 19 Her walk was documented discreetly from behind and there was a hidden camera installed inside of the mask capturing onlookers horrid reactions Krystof Doris contextualizes Wearing s approach The relationship between observer and observed is first established then reversed but always recounted from the perspective of the artist 19 In 2003 2006 Gillian Wearing recreated photographs of her relatives that were found in her family album 20 She created masks out of silicone of her mother her father her sister her uncle and a mask of herself with help from experts that were trained at Madam Tussauds in London 19 They start creating the mask in clay from a two dimensional image into a three dimensional object 20 In an article for The Guardian she explains that the process takes four months per mask and how at first some people tried to direct me to use prosthetics but I was adamant it had to be a mask something that transforms me entirely something that was not grotesque but real like a trompe l oeil 19 These expensive silicone masks deteriorate easily after use turning the photo shoot into a performative act where the action is unrepeatable 19 This process becomes paradoxical because of the difficulties that are encountered while recreating these casual snapshots 19 This work references into the canonical work in the history of photography of Cindy Sherman though Wearing has shifted the focus to exploring her own persona and its underlying relationships as a social construct 19 The works in Album then do not necessarily put the family members as the main focus rather they capture Wearing s engagement with the family members 19 Turner Prize edit 60 Minutes Silence 1996 is the piece that won Wearing the Turner Prize in 1997 21 Wearing used a fixed camera and the length of the pose was long in duration which resulted in an awkward personal moment 7 At first the image appears like a backlit group portrait of British police officers but after further examination the slight movements that they make reveals that it is in fact a video 7 In Krystof Doris text Masks Identity and Performativity he explains that the power relation between the viewer and the viewed the police officers are reversed due to the disciplining scenario that Wearing placed upon the group of police officers 19 The individuality of each member begins to assert itself as the recording goes on and the officers conclusively become ordinary human beings 19 1990s editIn the early 1990s Wearing started putting together photography exhibitions that were based around the idea of photographing anonymous strangers in the street who she had asked to hold up a piece of paper with a message on it Of these confessional pieces Wearing stated I decided that I wanted people to feel protected when they talked about certain things in their life that they wouldn t want the public that knows them to know I can understand that sort of holding on to things it s kind of part of British society to hold things in I always think of Britain as being a place where you re meant to keep your secrets you should never tell your neighbors or tell anyone Things are changing now because the culture s changed and the Internet has brought people out We have Facebook and Twitter where people tell you small details of their life 22 One of Wearing s first UK shows was held at the Chisenhale Gallery in east London in June 1997 In 1997 Wearing won the Turner Prize and exhibited videos such as 60 minutes silence which is a video of 26 uniformed police officers but at first appears to be a photograph Wearing said The piece is about authority restraint and control She also exhibited Sacha and Mum showing emotions between a mother and daughter Wearing described the piece as Things can not be finalized as far as emotions are concerned They re always in turmoil and can go to two polar opposites Cornelia Parker Christine Borland and Angela Bulloch were the other shortlisted artists 23 In the late 1990s Wearing made a three channel video called Drunk 1997 1999 for which she filmed a group of street drinkers who she had got to know outside her studio against the backdrop of a white photographic backdrop The drinkers are shown in different scenes individually and in groups They stagger around fall over bicker fight sleep and in the end one of the men stands against the backdrop and urinates 2000s edit In Wearing s Broad Street 2001 she documents the behavior of typical teenagers in British society who go out at night and drink large amounts of alcohol Wearing shows teenagers partying at various clubs and bars along Broad Street Birmingham Wearing follows these teenagers demonstrating how alcohol contributes to their loss of inhibitions insecurities and control 24 In 2003 Wearing caused controversy with her cover for The Guardian s G2 supplement consisting solely of the handwritten words Fuck Cilla Black 25 The cover illustrated an article by Stuart Jeffries complaining about the cruelty of modern television The themes of modern television were further explored in Wearing s project Family History 2006 commissioned by Film and Video Umbrella and accompanied by a publication on the project 26 2010s edit nbsp A Real Birmingham Family Wearing s 2010 show People 2005 2011 at Tanya Bonakdar Gallery included work ranging from video to photographic portraiture to installation and sculpture Snapshot 2005 is a series of seven single projection videos framed by a candy colored array of plasma screens each depicting different stages of the female life cycle from the innocence of early childhood to old age 27 Wearing also released her first feature film in this year Self Made Film theorist David Deamer writes that the film is a paradox And it is the nature of the paradox that gives the film its power The paradox emerges indirectly a consequence of the two modes of narration of the film First mode documentary The participants through their facilitator Sam Rumbelow explore the techniques of the method method acting which will allow them to encounter themselves anew and so generate their own self made film In this way each participant goes on to star in their own short which while encompassed by director Gillian Wearing s documentary appears as its own moment of narration So second mode fiction 28 Wearing was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire OBE in the 2011 Birthday Honours for services to art 29 In the same year she was among the names in Blake Gopnik s list The 10 Most Important Artists of Today 30 In 2012 a major retrospective of her work was held at Whitechapel Gallery London March June 2012 which surveyed her career and premiered new films and sculptures 31 The exhibition was organised with Kunstsammlung Nordrhein Westfalen Dusseldorf and supported by Maja Hoffmann Vicky Hughes and John Smith and Dr Naomi Milgrom AO 31 An accompanying monograph was published by Ridinghouse and included texts by curator Daniel Herrmann Doris Krystof Bernhart Schwenk and David Deamer 32 In 2013 Wearing showed her exhibit People Selected Parkett Artists Editions from 1984 to 2013 Parkett Space Zurich Switzerland 9 February 11 March 2013 33 On 30 October 2014 her sculpture A Real Birmingham Family was unveiled in front of the Library of Birmingham 34 On 24 April 2018 her statue of the suffragist Millicent Fawcett was unveiled in London s Parliament Square it is the first statue of a woman in Parliament Square 2 This makes Wearing the first woman to create a statue that is in Parliament Square 35 2020s edit From November 5 2021 to April 4 2022 the Solomon R Guggenheim Museum in New York City was showing Gillian Wearing Wearing Masks the first retrospective of Wearing s work in North America 3 4 Personal life editWearing lives and works in London with her partner British artist Michael Landy 36 Awards edit1997 Turner Prize for 60 Minutes Silence 1996 21 2007 Lifetime membership of the Royal Academy of Arts London 1 2016 Honorary Doctorate from Birmingham City University 37 References edit a b Gillian Wearing www royalacademy org uk Retrieved 16 November 2018 a b Millicent Fawcett Statue of suffragist to be unveiled in London BBC 24 April 2018 Retrieved 24 April 2018 a b Woodward Richard B 19 January 2022 Gillian Wearing Wearing Masks Review Turning a New Eye on the I Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved 13 February 2022 a b Heinrich Will 18 November 2021 Gillian Wearing Is Spilling Your Secrets The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 13 February 2022 a b Gillian Wearing Tanya Bonakdar Gallery Retrieved 20 November 2018 Myers Ben 3 September 2018 Criminalising squatters will hurt British pop music The Guardian Retrieved 28 December 2013 a b c Molon Dominic 2002 Observing the Masses Chicago IL Museum of Contemporary Art a b c Naime Sandy Howgate Sarah Graham Dixon Andrew Fidell Jo 2013 21st Century Portraits London National Portrait Gallery pp 72 74 a b c Schumacher Rainald Winzen Mathias 2003 Just Love Me Post Feminist Positions of the 1990s from the Goetz Collection a b c Ferguson Russel 1999 Show Your Emotions Gillian Wearing print ed London Phaidon pp 34 68 a b c O Reilly Sally Gillian Wearing Art Review 58 Art Source Slyce John 1999 10 16 Life under the Conditions of Art Gillian Wearing London Phaidon pp 72 86 a b M De Salvo Dona 1999 In Conversation with Gillian Wearing Gillian Wearing London Phaidon pp 1 31 Fowler Catherine 2013 Once More with Feeling Performing the Self in the Work of Gilian Wearing Kutlug Ataman and Phil Collins MIRAJ Moving Image Review amp Art Journal pp 10 14 O Reilly Sally Gillian Wearing Art Review 58 Art Source p 67 Ferguson Russel 1999 Show Your Emotions Gillian Wearing print ed London Phaidon p 38 Hodge David Confess All on Video Don t Worry You Will Be In Disguise Intrigued Call Gillian Version II Gillian Wearing OBE 1994 TATE a b c d Doris Krystof 2012 Masks Identity and Performativity Gillian Wearing London Whitechapel Gallery p 13 a b c d e f g h i j k Doris Krystof 2012 Masks Identity and Performativity Gillian Wearing London Whitechapel Gallery pp 9 29 a b Wearing Gillian 27 March 2012 Gillian Wearing Takeover Behind The Mask The Self Portraits The Guardian a b Turner Prize A Retrospective 1984 2006 96 97 Tate org uk Retrieved 13 October 2022 Corwin William September 2012 In Conversation Gillian Wearing with William Corwin Brooklyn Rail Retrieved 29 December 2013 Flannery M amp Preece R J 1998 Turner Prize 1997 Generating art debate World Sculpture News 4 1 28 30 Retrieved 29 December 2013 Martin Sylvia Broad Street Video Art page 94 Taschen 2006 Katz Ian 8 January 2003 Were we right to do this The Guardian Retrieved 29 December 2013 Wearing Gillian 2007 Family history London Film and Video Umbrella ISBN 978 1904270232 Rooney Kara L June 2011 Gillian Wearing People The Brooklyn Rail Deamer David 2016 Deleuze s Cinema Books Three Introductions to the Taxonomy of Images Edinburgh University Press pp 309 313 No 59808 The London Gazette Supplement 11 June 2011 p 13 Gopnik Blake 5 June 2011 The 10 Most Important Artists of Today Newsweek Retrieved 25 April 2021 a b Gillian Wearing Whitechapel Gallery Retrieved 20 November 2018 Gillian Wearing monograph Ridinghouse Gillian Wearing Biography regenprojects com Tyler Jane 30 October 2014 Library of Birmingham statue unveiling Two mums immortalised in ordinary family sculpture Birmingham Mail Retrieved 3 November 2014 Rosa Silverman 24 April 2018 Millicent Fawcett Parliament Square s first female statue has a much bigger story to tell The Telegraph Telegraph co uk Retrieved 24 April 2018 Rachel Campbell Johnston 7 October 2008 Michael Landy the man who had nothing The Times London Retrieved 22 October 2008 Birmingham artist Gillian Wearing given top university honour Birmingham City University Accessed 7 October 2016External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gillian Wearing Wearing interviewed by Matt Lippiatt for The Times Wearing interviewed by Leo Edelstein for the Journal of Contemporary Art Wearing interviewed by Grady Turner for Bomb Magazine Archived 14 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gillian Wearing amp oldid 1197708270, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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