Tomma Abts
Tomma Abts presents a carefully conceived installation of eleven paintings dating from 2000 to the present day.
Abts's densely wrought canvases take shape through a gradual process of layering and accrual, baring the visible traces of their construction. While each develops within its own specific parameters, tonal and formal relationships between works are revealed when hung together in the gallery.
Phil Collins
Phil Collins presents the video installation the return of the real / gercecegin geri donusu 2005, originally commissioned by the Ninth International Istanbul Biennial, in which he invited people who felt their lives had been ruined by appearing on talk shows and makeover shows to tell their stories.
He has also established a working production office Shady Lane Productions, operational Monday to Friday 10.00 – 18.00 in the Turner Prize exhibition, which will research a British episode of the return of the real over the course of the exhibition.
Mark Titchner
Mark Titchner presents How To Change Behaviour (Tiny Masters Of The World Come Out), a quasi-scientific installation that features hand-chiseled machines alongside a computer-designed billboard and questions the faith we place in technology.
Titchner is fascinated by belief systems and by the ways in which we communicate and receive ideas. He will also show Ergo Ergot, a striking, kinetic sculpture that uses optical illusions and hypnotic effects to manipulate the viewer's perception.
Rebecca Warren
Rebecca Warren presents an installation of new sculptural works.
The exuberant vitality of her unfired clay sculptures contrasts dramatically with wall-based vitrines displaying various found objects. A new series of bronze figures plays with the traditional connotations of the material.
While deliberately anti-heroic, Warren's works possess a powerful physicality and a persuasive emotional charge.
Tomma Abts presents a carefully conceived installation of eleven paintings dating from 2000 to the present day.
Abts's densely wrought canvases take shape through a gradual process of layering and accrual, baring the visible traces of their construction. While each develops within its own specific parameters, tonal and formal relationships between works are revealed when hung together in the gallery.
Phil Collins
Phil Collins presents the video installation the return of the real / gercecegin geri donusu 2005, originally commissioned by the Ninth International Istanbul Biennial, in which he invited people who felt their lives had been ruined by appearing on talk shows and makeover shows to tell their stories.
He has also established a working production office Shady Lane Productions, operational Monday to Friday 10.00 – 18.00 in the Turner Prize exhibition, which will research a British episode of the return of the real over the course of the exhibition.
Mark Titchner
Mark Titchner presents How To Change Behaviour (Tiny Masters Of The World Come Out), a quasi-scientific installation that features hand-chiseled machines alongside a computer-designed billboard and questions the faith we place in technology.
Titchner is fascinated by belief systems and by the ways in which we communicate and receive ideas. He will also show Ergo Ergot, a striking, kinetic sculpture that uses optical illusions and hypnotic effects to manipulate the viewer's perception.
Rebecca Warren
Rebecca Warren presents an installation of new sculptural works.
The exuberant vitality of her unfired clay sculptures contrasts dramatically with wall-based vitrines displaying various found objects. A new series of bronze figures plays with the traditional connotations of the material.
While deliberately anti-heroic, Warren's works possess a powerful physicality and a persuasive emotional charge.
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