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GAVIN TURK

b.1967

BIOGRAPHY

Gavin Turk is a British born, international artist. He has pioneered many forms of contemporary British sculpture now taken for granted, including the painted bronze, the waxwork, the recycled art-historical icon and the use of rubbish in art. Turk’s installations and sculptures deal with issues of authorship, authenticity and identity. Concerned with the ‘myth’ of the artist and the ‘authorship’ of a work, Turk’s engagement with this modernist, avant-garde debate stretches back to the ready-mades of Marcel Duchamp. In 1991, the Royal College of Art refused Turk a degree on the basis that his final show, ‘Cave’, consisted of a whitewashed studio space containing only a blue heritage plaque commemorating his presence ‘Gavin Turk worked here 1989-91'. Instantly gaining notoriety through this installation, Turk was spotted by Charles Saatchi and was included in several YBA exhibitions. Turk’s work has since been collected and exhibited by many major museums and galleries throughout the world. Prestel published Turk’s first major monograph in 2013, showcasing more than two decades of his work and in 2014 Trolley Books published ‘This Is Not A Book About Gavin Turk’ which playfully explores themes associated with the artist’s work via thirty notable contributors. Turk has recently been commissioned to make several public sculptures including L'Âge d'Or (2016), sited on the south corner of the Press Centre building in the Olympic Park and Nail, a 12-meter sculpture at One New Change, next to St Paul’s cathedral, London, England.

Gavin Turk (b. 1967, UK). Selected recent solo exhibitions include Letting Go, Reflex, Amsterdam (2019); Market Art Fair solo presentation, Christian Larsen, Stockholm, Sweden (2019); En Ouef, Maruani Mercier (2019); God is Gone, Galerie Krinzinger (2018); Give In, Ben Brown Fine Arts (2017); Who What When Where How and Why, Newport Street Gallery (2016); Wittgenstein’s Dream, Freud Museum (2015); Thirty-Eight, The Bowes Museum (2014). Turk has been included in numerous group exhibitions including Doublethink: Double Vision, Pera Museum (2017); In a dream you saw a way to survive and you were full of joy, Whitworth Art Gallery (2016); Self: Image and Identity: Self-portraiture from van Dyck to Lousie Bourgeois, Turner Contemporary (2015); Paparazzi – Photographers, starts and artists, Centre Pompidou (2014). Turks work can be found in numerous private and institutional collections wordwide including MOMA, New York; Tate, London; Victoria and Albert Museum, London; Saatchi Collection, London; Morgan Library, New York; Museum für Moderne Kunst, Frankfurt and Murdeme Collection, London.

 

“I don't think I ever really decided I was an artist. I went to college to learn how to think and look at art. In the end, I developed a more sophisticated misunderstanding of art”


ARTWORK


PAST EXHIBITIONS

Liqueur D'Expedition, 2014