吉爾伯特和喬治(Gilbert & George)
(1984年獲“透納獎”提名,1986年獲得“透納獎”)
生於1943,生於1942
英國雕塑家。吉爾伯特•普勒施(1943年9月17日,生於義大利聖馬蒂諾)和喬治•帕斯莫爾(1942年1月8日生於德文郡普利茅斯)相識于1967年,當時他們都在倫敦的聖馬丁藝術學院學習。到1969年,他們開始共同反對當時盛行于聖馬丁學院的雕塑方法,因為他們認為這樣的方法是精英化的,很難與藝術界之外溝通。他們的策略是把自己做成雕塑,為藝術犧牲自己的個人身份,激發創造性的思維。
雖然他們的作品包括了各種媒介,但是吉爾伯特和喬治仍然把自己所有的作品都稱作雕塑。1970至1974年間,他們也創作了木炭畫(被稱作“紙上雕塑的木炭畫”)和油畫,突出表現了他們“活體雕塑”的身份。
1971年,吉爾伯特和喬治創作了他們的首張“照片作”,此後成為了他們主要的表現形式。他們漸漸將創作主題的重點從自己的生活體驗轉机移開,而專注于在街上見到的都市現實生活和種種影響生活的結構與感情,例如宗教、階級、皇室、性、希望、國籍、死亡、身份、政治和恐懼等。20世紀90年代初,他們通過在莫斯科(1990)、北京和上海(1993)的一系列展覽,使人們重新關注他們“為人生而藝術”和“全民藝術”的思想。這些展覽突出表現了他們的信念:藝術仍然可以打破隔膜。
Gilbert & George
(nominated for Turner Prize in 1984 / won in 1986)
born 1943, born 1942
They are British sculptors. Gilbert Proesch (b Dolomites, Italy, 17 Sept 1943) and George Passmore (b Plymouth, Devon, 8 Jan 1942) met in 1967 as students at St Martin's School of Art in London. By 1969 they were reacting against approaches to sculpture then dominant at St Martin's, which they regarded as elitist and poor at communicating outside an art context. Their strategy was to make themselves into sculpture, so sacrificing their separate identities to art and turning the notion of creativity on its head.
Although working in a variety of media, Gilbert and George referred to all their work as sculpture. Between 1970 and 1974 they also made drawings (referred to as Charcoal on Paper Sculptures) and paintings to give a more tangible form to their identity as ‘living sculptures'.
In 1971 Gilbert & George made their first ‘photo-pieces', which remained their dominant form of expression. They gradually shifted the emphasis of their subject-matter away from their own experiences of life. Instead they concentrated on the inner-city reality that confronted them on the street and on the structures and feelings that inform life such as religion, class, royalty, sex, hope, nationality, death, identity, politics and fear. Their belief that they are making an ‘Art for Life's Sake' and an ‘Art for All' was, at the beginning of the 1990s, given a renewed emphasis through their exhibitions mounted in Moscow (1990), Beijing and Shanghai (1993). These exhibitions underline their belief that art can still positively break down barriers.
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