Liam Gillick
11 Nov - 10 Dec 2006
LIAM GILLICK
"Literally Based on H.Z."
Kerlin Gallery is pleased to announce an exhibition of new work by Liam Gillick.
Liam Gillick was born in Aylesbury, England in 1964 and graduated with a BA in Fine Art from Goldsmiths College, University of London in 1987. His work is shaped by an acute visual awareness of the way different properties of materials, structures and colour can affect our surroundings and therefore influence the way we behave. Gillick has consistently extended his practice into other disciplines, acting as designer, critic, author and curator.
Literally Based on H.Z. is an exhibition of new structures by Gillick designed specifically for Kerlin gallery. The title alludes to the parallel investigation of formal structure in the work of Austrian artist Heimo Zobernig. For this exhibition Zobernig has been consulted on the design of the supports for the objects presented. A series of trestle tables have subsequently been produced that carry objects that are therefore at two removes from their potential use and context. Firstly the works are defined and literally based upon the suggestion of another artist. Secondly the collection of objects should be seen as varying in scale, significance and potential, while some may be viewed as prototypes or models, others function as material tests or potential signage.
Much of the work for this project is based on academic research produced in South America concerning revised, progressive industrial working practices in Scandinavia in the 1970's. The work for this exhibition has been produced alongside writing about the notion of continued production in a post-industrial landscape, where the former workers return to their now abandoned experimental factory to revisit the progressive models of production that led to their subsequent redundancy.
Liam Gillick has been exhibiting internationally since the beginning of the Nineties. He was short-listed of the Turner Prize in 2002 and in 2005 had solo exhibitions, amongst others, at the Museum of Modern Art New York, 2004, the Palais de Tokyo, Paris, the ICA London and at the Baltimore Museum of Art, Baltimore USA in 2005
Since 1995 Liam Gillick has published a number of books that function in parallel to his artwork including Literally No Place (Book Works, London, 2002); Five or Six (Lukas & Sternberg, New York, 1999); Discussion Island/Big Conference Centre (Kunstverein Ludwigsburg, Ludwigsburg, and Orchard Gallery, Derry, 1997) and Erasmus is Late (Book Works, London, 1995).
For further details or images please contact Darragh Hogan: gallery@kerlin.ie
© Liam Gillick
Installation view 2006
"Literally Based on H.Z."
Kerlin Gallery is pleased to announce an exhibition of new work by Liam Gillick.
Liam Gillick was born in Aylesbury, England in 1964 and graduated with a BA in Fine Art from Goldsmiths College, University of London in 1987. His work is shaped by an acute visual awareness of the way different properties of materials, structures and colour can affect our surroundings and therefore influence the way we behave. Gillick has consistently extended his practice into other disciplines, acting as designer, critic, author and curator.
Literally Based on H.Z. is an exhibition of new structures by Gillick designed specifically for Kerlin gallery. The title alludes to the parallel investigation of formal structure in the work of Austrian artist Heimo Zobernig. For this exhibition Zobernig has been consulted on the design of the supports for the objects presented. A series of trestle tables have subsequently been produced that carry objects that are therefore at two removes from their potential use and context. Firstly the works are defined and literally based upon the suggestion of another artist. Secondly the collection of objects should be seen as varying in scale, significance and potential, while some may be viewed as prototypes or models, others function as material tests or potential signage.
Much of the work for this project is based on academic research produced in South America concerning revised, progressive industrial working practices in Scandinavia in the 1970's. The work for this exhibition has been produced alongside writing about the notion of continued production in a post-industrial landscape, where the former workers return to their now abandoned experimental factory to revisit the progressive models of production that led to their subsequent redundancy.
Liam Gillick has been exhibiting internationally since the beginning of the Nineties. He was short-listed of the Turner Prize in 2002 and in 2005 had solo exhibitions, amongst others, at the Museum of Modern Art New York, 2004, the Palais de Tokyo, Paris, the ICA London and at the Baltimore Museum of Art, Baltimore USA in 2005
Since 1995 Liam Gillick has published a number of books that function in parallel to his artwork including Literally No Place (Book Works, London, 2002); Five or Six (Lukas & Sternberg, New York, 1999); Discussion Island/Big Conference Centre (Kunstverein Ludwigsburg, Ludwigsburg, and Orchard Gallery, Derry, 1997) and Erasmus is Late (Book Works, London, 1995).
For further details or images please contact Darragh Hogan: gallery@kerlin.ie
© Liam Gillick
Installation view 2006