Public Housing
Summary
A number of contemporary apartment blocks with a modern sculpture in the foreground. A large-scale photograph of a life-sized built environment constructed out of paper and cardboard and then destroyed once the photographic work is made. Hovering between artifice and reality, this labour intensive process creates an alluring yet deceptive illusion of a tangible public housing project. Edition 3 of 6.
Display Label
Focal Points: Art and Photography Photography is the medium at the heart of many of the most significant works of art of our times and its uses are many and varied. This display explores just some of the different ways contemporary artists have employed the camera in their work. Following Pop Art’s lead in adopting the aesthetics of the everyday, the commercial and the banal and its incorporation of photography, Conceptual art of the late 1960s and 1970s took up the rough and ready photograph alongside language as its principal means of expression. Often the photograph was used as evidence of a time-based action or performance. The artists in this display, working from the 1980s onwards, have taken inspiration from these earlier artistic movements pioneering the use of photography and have gone on to explore many traditional artistic themes in new and exciting ways. Here are artists using the camera to explore the body, reinvent still-life, examine our cultural identities or explore the places where we live work and spend our leisure time. Often their work finds ways of making the familiar strange and the ugly beautiful. Over the last 10 years the Gallery has collected a number of works via the Contemporary Art Society’s Special Collection Scheme on the themes of photography and sculpture and the connections between the two. These works have formed the inspiration for the current display. Works from the collections of Manchester Art Gallery, The Arts Council Collection, The Whitworth Art Gallery and private collections An Arts Council Collection Partnership supported by Christie’s Selected by Tim Wilcox South Bank logo group set (our logos ?)
Object Name
Public Housing
Creators Name
Date Created
2003
Dimensions
unframed: 100cm x 157cm
accession number
2018.50
Collection Group
Place of creation
Germany
Support
paper (photographic)
Medium
chromogenic print
Legal
© Thomas Demand, VG Bild Kunst, Bonn/ DACS, London