Showing posts with label Turner Prize 2023. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Turner Prize 2023. Show all posts

Tuesday, 5 December 2023

Art & Culture: Jesse Darling wins Turner Prize 2023

Jesse Darling, who lives and works in Berlin and London, standing among his Turner Prize 2023 installation,
currently on show in Eastbourne's Towner 
until 14 April 2024. 
Photo: Hello Content

Congratulations to Jesse Darling, winner of the £25,000 Turner Prize 2023, announced this evening at a ceremony presented by musician, creative and broadcaster Tinie Tempah at Eastbourne’s Winter Garden, adjacent to Towner Eastbourne, the gallery that hosts this year’s prize. 

(L to R) Tate Britain Director Alex Farquharson; broadcaster Tinie Tempah; Towner Eastbourne CEO Joe Hill and Turner Prize 2023 winner Jesse Darling at the Awards Ceremony.
Photo: Victor Frankowski, Hello Content



Jesse Darling works in sculpture, installation, video, drawing, sound, text and performance, using a "materialist peotics" to explore and reimagine the everyday technologies that represent how we live.

The other three nominees shortlisted for Turner 2023 are British artist Barbara Walker; Rory Pilgrim, who works between the UK and The Netherlands; and London-based Swedish artist Ghislaine Leung.

The jury commended all four nominated artists for their distinct and affecting presentations. Together their varied practices, so well represented in their Turner Prize presentations, are grounded in the realities of the world today, often giving voice to themes of uncertainty and vulnerability. Their work brings immediacy to the issues they respond to, realising these themes in powerful and unexpected ways.

Installation view of Jesse Darling's creation at Towner Eastbourne, 2023. Photo: Angus Mill 
Jesse Darling was commended for his use of materials and commonplace objects like concrete, welded barriers, hazard tape, office files and net curtains, to convey a familiar yet delirious world.
His recent practice encompasses sculpture, installation, text and drawing.

The Turner Prize is one of the best-known visual arts prizes in the world.  It  aims to promote public debate around new developments in contemporary British art. The prize is awarded to an artist born or based in the UK, for an outstanding exhibition or presentation of their work in the past twelve months.

The Turner Prize 2023 jury commended Jesse Darling for his use of materials and commonplace objects like concrete, welded barriers, hazard tape, office files and net curtains, to convey a familiar yet delirious world. Invoking societal breakdown, his presentation unsettles perceived notions of labour, class, Britishness and power.

Installation view of Jesse Darling at Towner Eastbourne, 2023.
Nominated for his solo exhibitions No Medals, No Ribbons at Modern Art Oxford and Enclosures at Camden Art Centre, his presentation for this year's Turner Prize took cues from Towner's coastal location n an installation exploring borders, bodies, nationhood and exclusion.
Photo: Angus Mill 

The members of the Turner Prize 2023 jury are Martin Clark, Director, Camden Art Centre; Cédric Fauq, Chief Curator, Capc musée d’art contemporain de Bordeaux; Melanie Keen, Director of Wellcome Collection and Helen Nisbet, CEO and Artistic Director, Cromwell Place. The jury is chaired by Alex Farquharson, Director, Tate Britain.

An exhibition of the four shortlisted artists is at Towner Eastbourne until 14 April 2024. It is curated by Noelle Collins, Exhibitions and Offsite Curator at Towner Eastbourne. This year’s prize is presented as part of Towner 100, a year-long celebration of arts and culture across Eastbourne and Sussex marking the centenary of Towner Eastbourne. The seaside town is also hosting a wide-ranging cultural programme - Eastbourne ALIVE - encompassing art installations at public buildings in the town and the re-animation of underused spaces through public art, dance and music events. 

Turner Prize 2023 is sponsored by King & McGaw. The education partner is University of Sussex. Turner Prize is supported by Lorna Gradden, Chalk Cliff Trust, The John Browne Charitable Trust and The Uggla Family Foundation. It is also supported in 2023 by Eastbourne Borough Council and East Sussex County Council.  

The prize will mark its 40th anniversary next year, returning to Tate Britain in London for the first time since 2018.

Monday, 2 October 2023

Art Installations: Eastbourne ALIVE is launched to coincide with Turner Prize 2023

With Towner Eastbourne in East Sussex hosting Turner Prize 2023,  the seaside town with its coastline along the English channel has also taken the opportunity to launch Eastbourne ALIVE, funded by Arts Council England.

The interior of Eve de Haan's "It's Nicer to be Nice," an urban healing garden within a pink shipping container,
filled with pink sand and plants, where the public are invited to enter and enjoy a moment of contemplation; 
commissioned by Hive Curates for Engield Winter Lights.
This is located right at the heart of the Eastbourne town centre, outside The Beacon shopping centre.

The wide-ranging cultural programme encompasses art installations at public buildings and the reanimation of underused spaces through public art, dance and music events.  The full Eastbourne ALIVE programme is run throughout the Turner Prize 2023 exhibition period, from September 2023 to April 2024.

Michael Rakowitz's winged bull, entitled "The Invisible enemy should not exist (Lamassu of Nineveh)" outside the Towner Eastbourne.  It has been placed in Eastbourne, by the courtesy of the Mayor of London, after it stood guard on Trafalgar Square's Fourth Plinth in London where it was originally commissioned.  Rakowitz reconstructed the Lamassu using empty metal Iraqi date syrup cans to clad an underlying steel armature.

The public artworks and interventions are installed across the town, including outside the Towner Eastbourne, the Eastbourne Pier and the sea front, in community spaces such as the Eastbourne Library and the Winter Garden events venue, and cafes, outside shopping centres and  by artists including Nathan Coley, Michael Rakowitz, Helen Cammock, Martyn Cross, Eve De Hann, Nadina Ali, Tarek Lakhrissi, Adam Moore, Flo Brooks, Madeleine Pledge, Liz Wilson.  Among the artists, Cammock won the Max Mara Art Prize for Women in 2017 and in 2019 was the joint recipient of The Turner Prize. 

Adam Moore's Still Life at the end of the Eastbourne Pier, commissioned by Devonshire Collective. It is an intervention combining image, text and Eastbourne pier's unique architecture, choreography and changing ambience.  It shows an image of the horizon, captured at the artwork's location, carrying the last two lines of William Ernest Henley's 1875 poem Invictus.

Nathan Coley's "I Don't Have Another Land" is lit up above the Eastbourne Library.

Internationally renowned Coley was shortlisted in the 2007 Turner Prize. His text sculpture, "I Don't Have Another Land", found on the top of the Eastbourne Library facade, was inspired by graffiti found on a wall in Jerusalem in the early 2000s. The work is part of the Towner Collection.

Multi-disciplinary artists of Rottngdean Bazaar has also commissioned Existence Proof at Devonshire Collective's VOLT Gallery on Seaside Road.



Nadina Ali's Love, Empathy, Respect, Dignity.  The artist from Marseille uses bold and colourful typography to address topics about social justice and representation, and to make art and creativity accessible to as many people as possible.
 

For this artwork in the arcade on the Eastbourne Pier,  Rottingdean Bazaar use one of the arcade's Skill Cut Winner machines, in which a player must cut a string with an automated blade to release the prize, a giant plush teddy bear.
Sarah Dance, Project Director of Eastboure ALIVE said, "Eastbourne ALIVE is a celebration of the Turner Prize being hosted in Eastbourne, and represents a huge opportunity for Eastbourne.  Through a wide range of projects and interventions we hope to create a lasting legacy for the town, with the arts and culture embedded in its vision for the future."

For the duration of Eastbourne ALIVE,
VOLT gallery at Seaside Road features a new window commission
made by Rottingdean Bazaar in partnership with
photographer Annie Collinge.

Eastbourne ALIVE are also working with a range of creative organisations across the town, including Devonshire Collective, Compass Arts, Talent Accelerator, Coastal Schools Partnership and Sussex modern.  Rottingdean Bazaar has 

All photos by Lucia Carpio.


Thursday, 28 September 2023

Turner Prize 2023: Eastbourne of East Sussex celebrates with the Turner Prize at the Towner Gallery

The East Sussex art gallery Towner Eastbourne is celebrating its centenary, and the cherry on the cake for its year-long celebration is its hosting of an exhibition showcasing the work by the four shortlisted artists nominated for the international Turner Prize 2023, the world’s leading prize for contemporary art.

The Turner Prize exhibition, free to view at the Eastbourne Towner, spans galleries and spaces across all three floors of the building.   In the Welcome Space on the ground floor, visitors are urged to see films on the individual artists’ practices, with information on the history of the Turner Prize and details about the rest of Towner’s programme, including artist talks. 

The four shortlisted nominees for Turner 2023 on show at Eastbourne Towner are British artist Barbara Walker; Rory Pilgrim, who works between the UK and The Netherlands;  Jesse Darling, who lives and works in Berlin and London; and London-based Swedish artist Ghislaine Leung.

Joe Hill, Director and CEO of Towner Eastbourne welcomed the Turner Prize 2023 to Eastbourne, as the centrepiece of Towner Eastbourne's Centenary year.  "Founded as 'an art gallery for the people,' the gallery has always championed living artists and has been at the forefront of showcasing and collection contemporary art in the UK, said Hill.  "What better way to celebrate this legacy than to bring one of the world's best-known prizes for the visual arts to the region."

Alex Farquharson, Director of Tate Britain, and chair of the Turner Prize 2023 jury, said. "Jesse Darling, Ghislaine Leung, Rory Pilgrim and Barbara Walker have remarkably varied approaches to creating art that actively responds to and reflects the world around us - engaging with the social, economic, cultural and political issues of our time.  The Turner Prize offers a fascinating snapshot of contemporary British art now, and a key part of its popularity is its ability to spotlight the rich cultural offerings of our towns and cities on its travels to a truly unmissable movement in Turner Prize history.  I look forward to this year's exhibition being enjoyed by East Sussex's residents and visitors alike."

The Turner Prize* exhibition is now open and free to view until April 14th 2024,  spanning galleries and spaces across all three floors of the Towner.   In the Welcome Space on the ground floor, visitors are urged to see films on the individual artists’ practices, with information on the history of the Turner Prize and details about the rest of Towner’s programme, including artist talks. 

The winner of this prestigious prize will be announced at an award ceremony on December 5th, to take place next door in the iconic "Winter Garden", a Grade II listed events building, designed by architect Henry Currey and built by the seventh Duke of Devonshire in 1875. 

Two of Barbara Walker's Proof of Burden portraits (2022) in mixed media with graphite,
conte, charcoal and pastel on paper.

Finalist Barbara Walker works in a range of media and formats, from embossed works on paper to paintings on canvas and large scale charcoal wall drawings.  Growing up in Birmingham, Walker's experiences have shaped a practice concerned with issues of class and power, gender, race, representation and belonging.

Walker was nominated for her presentation entitled Burden of Proof at Sharjah Biennial 15. In this body of work, Walker brings careful attention and visibility to individuals and families affected by the Windrush scandal.

For the exhibition at Towner, Walker's presentation features large scale charcoal figures drawn directly onto the gallery wall, demonstrating the artist has a bold statement and a strong message to make.  On the adjacent walls is a series of works on paper. 

Walker's monochromatic portraits feature people who were impacted by the Windrush scandal and each portrait is layered over by hand-drawn reproductions of documents that evidence their right to remain in the UK. 

These intimate portraits invite the viewer to come face to face with real people whose struggle for legitimacy to remain in the UK and to consider the true consequences of political decision-making and the complexities of diasporic identity.

The jury applauded Walker's ability to use portraits of monumental scale to tell stories of a similarly monumental nature, whilst maintaining a profound tenderness and intimacy across the full scope of her work.

Rory Pilgrim is a multi-disciplinary artist working across song writing, composition, films, texts, drawings, paintings and live performances.  Pilgrim aims to challenge the nature of how we come together, speak, listen and strive for social change through sharing and voicing personal experience.

A still from Rory Pilgrim's RAFTS, 2022, HD Video (1:06:55).
Pilgrim interweaves stories, poems, music and film, to reflect on times of change and struggle
during the Covid-19 pandemic.

Courtesy of andriesse~eyck galerie.

Rory Pilgrim was nominated for the commission RAFTS at Serpentine and Barking Town Hall, and a live performance of the work at Cadogan Hall, London.  Pilgrim's presentation "Rafts (2022" on the first floor at the Towner is a hour-long film featuring a seven-song oratorio narrated by eight residents of Barking and Dagenham in London from Green Shoes Arts, reflecting on what the symbol of a raft means to them through song, music, animation and poetry.  They are joined by singers Declan Rowe John, Robyn Haddon, Kayden Fearon and members of Barking and Dagenham Youth Dance.  The film is a soulful, emotional body of work made during the Covid-19 pandemic and the raft is positioned as a symbol of support keeping us afloat in challenging and precarious circumstances. 

Timed screenings of Rafts and Rafts: Live are presented with paintings, drawings, writings and sculptures in the same room and in the space outside the room that expand on the theme.

Rory Pilgrim's Putting The World To Bed, 2021, on oil, crayon
and nail polish on wooden panel.

The jury praised the film project as a standout example of social practice.  They felt that Pilgrim's beautiful and affecting musical arrangements gave light to their collaborators' voices and that the confidence and vulnerability of the performance reflected the strength of the relationship between artist and community.

Jesse Darling works in sculpture, installation, video, drawing, sound, text and performance, using materlialist poetics to explore and reimagine the everyday technologies that represent how we live.  Darling has often combined industrial materials such as sheet metal and welded steel with everyday objects to explore ideas of the domestic and the institutional, home and state, stability and instability, function and dysfunction, growth and collapse.


Jesse Darling's installation showcase metal pedestrian barriers that appear to have legs that walk across the room

Darling was nominated for his solo No Medals, No Ribbons at Modern Art Oxford and Enclosures at Camden Art Centre in London.  Darling's work encompasses sculptures and installations which evoke the vulnerability of the human body and the precariousness of power structures.  The sculptural works Corpus (Half-staff) and Inter Alia I (both 2022) form a fragmented colonnade in the gallery.  Here, concrete and polystyrene pills are topped wth barbed wire, venetian blinds and net curtains. Pedestrian barriers and prickly anti-bird spikes also echo a hostile and controlling element of the built environment, with a jarring proximity to our domestic everyday.

The jury was struck by Darling's ability to manipulate materials in ways that skillfully express the messy reality of life.  They felt that these exhibitions revealed the breadth and integrity of Darling's practice, exposing the world's underlying fragility and refusing to make oneself appear legible and functioning to others.
Ghislaine Leung, Fountains. Installation View at Simian, Copenhagen, Denmark, 2023. Courtesy the artist and Simian, Copenhagen; and Maxwell Graham, New York; and Cabinet, London.
Photo credit GRAYSC.

Ghislane Leung's practice takes a critical look at the condition of art production, its presentation and circulation.  Leung has developed a process of art making that results in "score-based artworks".  The "scores" are text-based instructions or descriptions that are realised by the gallery team in close conversation with the artist.

Ghislane Leung's Fountain

Leung was nominated for her solo exhibition Fountains at Simian, Copenhagen.  Leung's work takes the form of "scores" - sets of instructions which test the boundaries of the gallery space.  Fountains (2022) is an artwork created from a score that simply states "a fountain installed in the exhibition space to cancel sound".

At Towner, Leung's presentation also features a baby monitor installed in the art store, broadcasting live to the exhibition space, and a wall drawing representing the hours that Leung can dedicate to working in her studio.  There is also a row of children's toy houses and toy household items.  These installations reflect on the realities of an artist role as a mother and highlight her interest in the time, labour and support structures required to make and maintain artworks.

The jury particularly commended the warm, humorous and transcendental qualities that lay behind the sleek aesthetic and conceptual nature of Leung's work, as well as her commitment to challenging the way art is produced and circulated.

*Turner Prize, one of the best-known prizes for the visual arts in the world, aims to promote public debate around new developments in contemporary British art.  Established in 1984, the Prize is awarded to a British artist for an outstanding exhibition or other presentation of their work in the previous twelve months.

Members of the Turner Prize 2023 jury are Martin Clark, Director, Camden Art Centre; Cédric Fauq, Chief Curator, Capc musée d’art contemporain de Bordeaux; Melanie Keen, Director of Wellcome Collection; and Helen Nisbet, Artistic Director, Art Night. Alex Farquharson, Director of Tate Britain, was chair of the 2023 jury.

The Turner Prize winner will be awarded £25,000 with £10,000 awarded to the other shortlisted artists.

The Turner Prize, established n 1984, aims to promote public debate around new developments in contemporary British art. It is named after the renowned British painter JMW Turner (1775-1851) and is awarded each year to a British artist for an outstanding exhibition or other presentation of their work.

Turner Prize 2023 is curated by Noelle Collins, Exhibitions and Offsite Curator at Towner Eastbourne.  It is one of the major events of Towner 100, a year-long centenary celebration of arts and culture across Eastbourne.  Towner Eastbourne kicked off the year of celebration with Barbara Hepworth: Art & Life earlier this year until September 2023.  Coinciding with the Turner Prize is Eastbourne ALIVE - a wide range of public art commissions and events taking place across the town.

All photos at the Turner Prize 2023 exhibition/ Towner Eastbourne by Lucia Carpio. Others are appropriately credited.

Monday, 29 May 2023

Art: Turner Prize 2023 shortlist announced; Towner Eastbourne to host exhibition September 28 to April 14 2024

by Lucia Carpio, Head of Content

Towner Eastbourne, the East Sussex art gallerywill host the Turner Prize 2023, the world’s leading prize for contemporary art, from September 28 2023 to April 14 2024.

Tate Britain has announced the four shortlisted nominees as Jesse Darling, Ghislaine Leung, Rory Pilgrim and Barbara Walker.  The winner will be announced on December 5 2023 at an award ceremony in Eastbourne's Winter Gardens.

Installation view of Jesse Darling, Enclosures at Camden Art Centre, 2022.
Photo by Eva Herzog. Courtesy of the artist and Camden Art Centre, London.

Jesse Darling was nominated for his solo No Medals, No Ribbons at Modern Art Oxford and Enclosures at Camden Art Centre.  Darling's work encompasses sculptures and installations which evoke the vulnerability of the human body and the precariousness of power structures.  The jury was struck by Darling's ability to manipulate materials in ways that skillfully express the messy reality of life.  They felt that these exhibitions revealed the breadth and integrity of Darling's practice, exposing the world's underlying fragility and refusing to make oneself appear legible and functioning to others.

Ghislaine Leung, Fountains. Installation View at Simian, Copenhagen, Denmark, 2023. Courtesy the artist and Simian, Copenhagen; and Maxwell Graham, New York; and Cabinet, London.
Photo credit GRAYSC.

Ghislane Leung was nominated for her solo exhibition Fountains at Simian, Copenhagen.  Leung's work takes the form of "scores" - sets of instructions which test the boundaries of the gallery space.  Baby monitors, child safety gates, inflatable structures, toys, and water fountains are used to turn the exhibition structure on its head, asking questions about time, leisure and labour.  The jury particularly commended the warm, humorous and transcendental qualities that lay behind the sleek aesthetic and conceptual nature of Leung's work, as well as her commitment to challenging the way art is produced and circulated.

Rory Pilgrim's RAFTS, 2022, HD Video Still (1:06:55). Courtesy of andriesse~eyck galerie.

Rory Pilgrim was nominated for the commission RAFTS at Serpentine and Barking Town Hall, and a live performance of the work at Cadogan Hall, London.  Pilgrim's work interweaves stories, poems, music and film, created in collaboration with local communities in the London borough of Barking and Dagenham, to reflect on times of change and struggle during the pandemic.  The jury praised the project as a standout example of social practice.  They felt that Pilgrim's beautiful and affecting musical arrangements gave light to their collaborators' voices and that the confidence and vulnerability of the performance reflected the strength of the relationship between artist and community.

Barbara Walker's Burden of Proof, 2022. Installation view: Sharjah Biennial 15, Old Diwan Al Amiri, 2023. Commissioned by Sharjah Art Foundation with the support of The Whitworth, The University of Manchester.
Photo by Danko Stjepanovic.

Barbara Walker was nominated for her presentation entitled Burden of Proof at Sharjah Biennial 15.  With a practice that interrogates past and present issues of racial identity, exclusion and power, Walker's presentation explores the impact of the Windrush scandal, underlaying figurative drawn portraits with facsimiles of the documentation these individuals had to produce to prove their right to remain.  The jury applauded Walker's ability to use portraits of monumental scale to tell stories of a similarly monumental nature, whilst maintaining a profound tenderness and intimacy across the full scope of her work.

Turner Prize, one of the best-known prizes for the visual arts in the world, aims to promote public debate around new developments in contemporary British art.  Established in 1984, the Prize is awarded to a British artist for an outstanding exhibition or other presentation of their work in the previous twelve months.

The Turner Prize winner will be awarded £25,000 with £10,000 awarded to the other shortlisted artists.

Turner Prize 2023 is one of the major events of Towner 100, a year-long centenary celebration of arts and culture across Eastbourne.  The other major exhibition  at Towner Eastbourne this year is Barbara Hepworth: Art & Life which is currently held until September 25 2023.

Members of the Turner Prize 2023 jury are Martin Clark, Director, Camden Art Centre; Cédric Fauq, Chief Curator, Capc musée d’art contemporain de Bordeaux; Melanie Keen, Director of Wellcome Collection; and Helen Nisbet, Artistic Director, Art Night.  The jury is chaired by Alex Farquharson, Director, Tate Britain.

With support from Eastbourne Borough Council and East Sussex County Council, the Turner Prize 2023 will bring transformative cultural and social experiences for visitors and residents, said Joe Hill, Director and CEO of Towner Eastbourne.

In a press release, Hill said the Towner Eastbourne looks forward to welcoming the shortlisted artists who will collectively bring a sense of place and community to the galleries, through their diverse range of practices, from film and performance to drawing and sculpture.  

"Together they are an incredibly strong set of exhibiting artists, who ask us to look at some of the most pertinent issues of today.  

"There is really something for everyone to engage with in this shortlist and my thanks to the jury for their research, knowledge and insight in putting forward these four brilliant artists for the exhibition."