A special exhibition of work by prisoners and others in confinement in Britain - including inmates of young offender institutions, high security psychiatric hospitals and immigration removal centres. The work has been selected from the Koestler Awards Scheme which promotes art and design across the criminal justice system. On view approximately 200 artworks.
Art from the Koestler Awards Scheme
The ICA is proud to present Insider Art a
special exhibition of work by prisoners and others in
confinement in Britain – including inmates of young offender institutions, high security psychiatric
hospitals and immigration removal centres.
The work has been selected from the Koestler Awards Scheme, an annual open submission competition
which promotes art and design across the criminal justice system. Firmly established as a major annual
event, 2007 has seen a record 3,100 entries in the art and design categories. Submissions are sent to the
Koestler Arts Centre at HMP Wormwood Scrubs, and a quarter of entrants receive certificates and
financial prizes (ranging from £20 to £100) awarded by a panel of judges who also give feedback to the
entrants. This is the first year that works from the awards scheme will be shown in a major public
institution and it is also the first time that some of the work will be exhibited under the artists’ own names.
The ICA exhibition will present approximately two hundred artworks drawn from the 2007 submissions.
The exhibition has been specially selected for the ICA by Zelda Cheatle (photography consultant and
Koestler trustee), Grayson Perry (artist), Dr Mike Phillips (author and curator, Tate) and Mark
Sladen (Director of Exhibitions, ICA). Works on display will include painting, sculpture, drawing,
ceramics, textiles and other media. Many of the pieces will be for sale, with proceeds from the sales divided
between the artists, the Koestler Trust and Victim Support.
Mark Sladen, Head of Exhibitions, ICA: “In Britain in the last few years contemporary art has become
very fashionable and the commercial art scene has massively expanded. With all this money and glamour it
is perhaps easy to forget that people make art for a very wide range of reasons, and that many of the most
amazing works of art are made by nonprofessional
artists. The ICA is very proud to host an exhibition of
work drawn from the Koestler Awards Scheme, a scheme which reveals the artistic talents contained within
some of Britain’s least public institutions.”
Tim Robertson, Director of The Koestler Trust: “Every Spring in prisons across the country you can
hear inmates asking each other, “What are you putting in for the Koestlers?” This year there has been a
huge extra buzz – because the artworks they submit may be selected for a nationally prestigious gallery.
The ICA will bring offender art to the widest audience it has yet had. If the experience of our past visitors is
anything to go by, people will be blown away by the sheer power of the work. And the timing is ripe for
debating the value of the arts in criminal justice, as the Government has just decided to cut all its funding to
us.”
The Koestler Trust is an independent charity that was founded by the Hungarianborn
writer, activist and
philosopher Arthur Koestler in 1962 to support the creation of art in prisons. Koestler (190583)
is best
known as the author of the prison novel Darkness at Noon (1940) and was a leading figure in the campaign
against capital punishment. Koestler served time as a political prisoner in Spain and France, spent six
weeks in HMP Pentonville in 1940 where he was sent as an illegal alien, and likened the experience of
prison to a “death of the spirit”. He believed that giving prisoners the opportunity to create art would
restore confidence, encourage communication and inspire a positive means of expression, which in turn
would aid the rehabilitation process and transition to life outside.
Since its foundation, the Koestler Trust has developed a unique national role and is recognised across the
criminal justice system for supporting and rewarding the creative activity of offenders and for showcasing
their arts to the public. 2007 will see the launch of Koestler Mentors – artists trained to support award
winners to continue their arts activity after their release from prison. The Trust is funded by individual
donors and other sources, but has also relied on a Government grant. Sadly this grant (which constituted a
fifth of its running costs) is being cut entirely this year.
Insider Art offers an important insight into both the vibrant artistic culture within the criminal justice
system and the work of the Koestler Trust in fostering it.
The exhibition will be accompanied by a programme of talks and gallery tours.
PANEL DISCUSSION: INSIDER ART SELECTORS
Saturday 21 July, 3 pm: Brandon Room
FREE WITH DAY MEMBERSHIP
Panel discussion with three of the exhibition selectors for Insider Art, Zelda Cheatle (photography consultant and Koestler trustee), Dr Mike Phillips (author and curator, Tate) and Mark Sladen (Director of Exhibitions, ICA).
GALLERY TOURS
Sunday 22 July and every Saturday from 28 July-8 September, 3pm: Lower Gallery
FREE WITH DAY MEMBERSHIP
Special tours of the exhibition will be given every week by individuals directly involved with the criminal justice system in Britain, including Koestler Trust Director Tim Robertson and ex-offender artists.
Supported by Bloomberg
Image: Man on Motorbike, 2007, Matchstick and mixed media, Maghaberry. Photo: Marcus J Leith
For Further information, please contact: Natasha Plowright, Head of Press ICA Press Office Tel: 020 7766 1404 Email: natashap@ica.org.uk
Institute of Contemporary Arts
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