The Golden Thread. Turk continually explores what it means to be an artist, investigating avant-garde ideas of authorship, authenticity, originality and value, subjecting them to a rigorous and playful scrutiny. For this exhibition, Turk has produced a single, large-scale installation that explores the notions of perception and suspension, image and reality.
The Golden Thread
White Cube is pleased to announce an exhibition of new work by British artist Gavin Turk. Turk continually explores what it means to be an artist, investigating avant-garde ideas of authorship, authenticity, originality and value, subjecting them to a rigorous and playful scrutiny. For this exhibition, Turk has produced a single, large-scale installation that explores the notions of perception and suspension, image and reality.
Gavin Turk announced his artistic strategy in 1991 when he was denied his degree at the Royal College of Art for his exhibition, which consisted of an empty studio space adorned with an English Heritage plaque bearing the inscription 'Borough of Kensington Gavin Turk Sculptor Worked Here 1989 -1991'. Turk symbolically killed himself off when he had only just begun. Having in a sense made himself invisible, Turk could go on to adopt different personas. To this end, he makes frequent appearances in his own photographic and sculptural works, in a series of different guises. His best-known sculpture Pop (1993) is a waxwork of the artist as Sid Vicious in the stance of Warhol's Elvis Presley. Turk has made a sculptural version of David's The Death of Marat, substituting himself for the bath-bound revolutionary and also a self-portrait in wax as the dead Che Guevara in his work Che (1999). In these works, Turk has turned himself into a prop - the artist as object - a device that reflects the themes of transformation, disguise and disappearance, which persist in his work.
Turk has made various signature works, which fetishes his own signature, and in doing so, pays homage to the works of Piero Manzoni and Marcel Duchamp, artists who explored the way in which a work of art is conferred iconic status. This preoccupation with value and how it is or isn't assigned manifests itself in much of his sculptural work. Bum (1998) a self-portrait waxwork of Turk as a vagrant challenged the rock-star/artist status asserted in a work like Pop. In turning to the street Turk has followed up these themes in works like Pimp (1998), a rubbish skip in shiny black transformed into a high modernist sculpture and Nomad (2001-2003), a painted bronze sculpture of a dirty sleeping bag. Other painted bronze sculptures of 'worthless objects' such as bin-bags, opened out cardboard boxes, and polystyrene cups further develop this preoccupation whilst also focusing attention on the receptivity of the viewer: how art requires a 'leap of faith' on the part of the viewer and how it requires the viewer collude with a 'performance' by momentarily suspending disbelief.
Gavin Turk has shown internationally, with solo exhibitions at the South London Gallery (1998), the Centre d'Art Contemporain, Geneva (2000), New Art Gallery, Walsall (2002) and the New Art Centre, Sculpture Park and Gallery, Salisbury (2003).
Opening Thursday 22 January 6-8pm
White Cube is open from Tuesday to Saturday, 10am - 6pm. For further information please contact Honey Luard or Susannah Hyman on 020 7930 5373.
White Cube, 48 Hoxton Square, London N1 6PB