Rachel Whiteread (1963 − )

Whiteread was born in London and studied painting at Brighton Polytechnic from 1982-1985, and later sculpture at the Slade School of Fine Art, London from 1985-1987. She participated in the DAAD Artist's Programme, Berlin in 1992 and was awarded the Turner Prize at the Tate Gallery, London in 1993. That same year she confirmed her position as one of the most important artists of her generation and gained international fame with House, a sculpture cast from the interior space of an entire condemned Victorian terraced house. The resulting sculpture was left in the location where the original house had once stood, on Grove Road in London's east end. House stood for three months before being demolished by Hackney Council to clear a communal park; the sculpture stood on one edge.

Whiteread casts directly from the negative space around and inside familiar utilitarian objects using plaster, resin and rubber. What remains is a reminder, ephemeral space and time made solid and tangible. Her work traces memory and absence, the cast sculptures bearing evidence of the original object; colour from wallpaper seeping into casting plaster, or imperfections in the underside of a cast iron bath tub faithfully recorded in resin. In addition to her sculpture, Whiteread uses photography as part of her practice: photographs of structures, buildings under construction or demolition, furniture abandoned in the street, empty rooms.

Whiteread had her first solo exhibition in 1988 at the Carlyle Gallery, London and two years later showed Ghost, a plaster cast of a room in a Victorian house at the Chisenhale Gallery, London. In 1996, the Tate Gallery Liverpool mounted a major solo exhibition, and an exhibition quickly followed at the Palacio de Velazquez, Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofia, Madrid the following year. She was selected to represent Britain for the XLVII Venice Biennale, for which she won the coveted Golden Lion. Her major commission for the Holocaust Memorial in Vienna was inaugurated in 2000. Her work is represented in major international collections

De la Moore la Hirst 60 de ani de sculptura Britanica (From Moore to Hirst: Sixty Years of British Sculpture), The British Council and the National Museum of Art, Bucharest 2004

Glossary (4)

  • Cast

    To form material such as molten metal, liquid plaster or liquid plastic into a three-dimensional shape, by pouring into a mould. Also see Lost-wax casting.

  • Negative

    An image in which colours and shades of an inage are reversed: the light areas of the object appear dark and the dark areas appear light. Also refers to a film, plate, or other photographic material containing such an image.

  • Painting

    Work of art made with paint on a surface. Often the surface, also called a support, is a tightly stretched piece of canvas, paper or a wooden panel. Painting involves a wide range of techniques and materials, along with the artist's intellectual concerns effecting the content of a work.

  • Sculpture

    A three-dimensional work of art. Such works may be carved, modelled, constructed, or cast. Sculptures can also be described as assemblage, in the round, relief, and made in a huge variety of media. Contemporary practice also includes live elements, as in Gilbert & George 'Living Sculpture' as well as broadcast work, radio or sound sculpture.

Past exhibitions

BLAST TO FREEZE: BRITISCHE KUNST IM 20. JAHRHUNDERT

  • 2003
    • France, Toulouse, LES ABATTOIRS
  • 2002
    • Germany, Wolfsburg, WOLFSBURG KUNSTMUSEUM

A CHANGED WORLD

  • 2000
    • Malta, Valletta, ST JAMES CAVALIER CENTRE FOR CREATIVITY
    • Cyprus, Nicosia, NICOSIA MUNICIPAL ARTS CENTRE
  • 1999
    • Zimbabwe, Harare, NATIONAL GALLERY OF ZIMBABWE
  • 1998
    • Zimbabwe, Bulawayo, NATIONAL GALLERY OF ZIMBABWE IN BULAWAYO
    • South Africa, Cape Town, SOUTH AFRICAN NATIONAL GALLERY
    • South Africa, Johannesburg, JOHANNESBURG ART GALLERY
  • 1997
    • Pakistan, Lahore, THE OLD FORT
    • Pakistan, Karachi, HINDU GYMKHANA

DIMENSIONS VARIABLE

  • 1999
    • Romania, Bucharest, NATIONAL THEATRE GALLERIES
    • Slovakia, Bratislava, SLOVENSKA NARODNA GALERIA
    • Hungary, Budapest, LUDWIG MUSEUM
    • Lithuania, Vilnus, CONTEMPORARY ART CENTRE
    • Germany, Darmstadt, INSTITUTE MATHILDENHOHE
  • 1998
    • Croatia, Zagreb, ZAGREB UNION OF CROATIAN ARTISTS
    • Czech Republic, Prague, PRAGUE NATIONAL GALLERY OF MODERN ART
    • Germany, Chemnitz, STADTISCHE KUNSTSAMMLUNGEN
    • Poland, Warsaw, ZACHETA NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART
    • Ukraine, Kiev, SOROS FOUNDATION
    • Sweden, Stockholm, ROYAL ACADEMY OF FREE ARTS
  • 1997
    • Finland, Helsinki, CITY ART MUSEUM

FIELD DAY SCULPTURE FROM BRITAIN

  • 2001
    • Taiwan, Taipei, TAIPEI FINE ARTS MUSEUM

METROPOLIS

  • 1991
    • Germany, Berlin, MARTIN-GROPIUS-BAU

MULTIPLE CHOICE

  • 2001
    • Sri Lanka, Colombo, LIONEL WENDT GALLERY
  • 2000
    • Singapore, Singapore, LASALLE-SIA COLLEGE OF THE ARTS
    • Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur, NATIONAL ART GALLERY
    • Malaysia, Penang, PENANG STATE MUSEUM AND ART GALLERY
    • Thailand, Chiang Mai, CHIANG MAI UNIVERSITY GALLERY
    • Thailand, Silpakorn, SILPAKORN UNIVERSITY ART GALLERY
    • Czech Republic, Pilsen, X CENTRE GALLERY
    • Czech Republic, Olomouc, GALLERY ZBROJNICE
  • 1999
    • Brazil, Brasilia, MUSEU DE ARTE
    • Brazil, Sao Paulo, MAC MUSEU DE ARTS CONTEMPORANEA
    • Brazil, Curitiba, MUSEU METROPOLITAN DE ARTE
    • Brazil, Rio De Janeiro, PACO IMPERIAL
  • 1998
    • Colombia, Bogota, BANCO DE LA REPUBLICA
    • Cuba, Havana, CENTRO WIFREDO LAM
    • Venezuela, Caracas, MUSEO DE ARTS CONETMPORANEO, SOFIA IMBER
  • 1997
    • Venezuela, Maracaibo, MUSEO ARTE CONTEMPORANEO DE ZULIA
    • Bolivia, La Paz
    • Peru, Trujillo, CONTINENTAL BANK
    • Peru, Arequipa, CENTRO CULTURAL CHAVES DE LA ROSA
    • Peru, Lima, PERUVIAN BRITISH CULTURAL ASSOCIATION

LE MUSEE A L'HEURE ANGLAISE

  • 1999
    • France, Valenciennes, MUSEE DES BEAUX ARTS

NEW ART FROM BRITAIN

  • 1995
    • Poland, Lodz, MUZEUM SZTUKI

NEW VOICES

  • 1997
    • Macedonia, Skopje, MUSEUM OF MODERN ART
  • 1996
    • Czech Republic, Prague, CZECH MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS, THE HOUSE OF THE BLACK MADONNA
    • Greece, Thessaloniki, CULTURAL CENTRE FOR THE NATIONAL BANK
    • Slovakia, Bratislava, MIRBACH PALACE
    • Russia, Nizhny Novgorod, KREMLIN MUSEUM
    • Russia, St Petersburg, THE RUSSIAN MUSEUM
    • Greece, Thessaloniki, CULTURAL CENTRE FOR THE NATIONAL BANK OF GREECE
    • Greece, Athens, ART HALLS OF THE CULTURAL CENTRE OF THE MUNICIPALITY OF ATHENS
    • Romania, Bucharest, NATIONAL THEATRE GALLERIES
  • 1995
    • Germany, Magdeburg, KULTURHISTORISCHES MUSEUM
  • 1994
    • Spain, Jerez, SALA PESCADERIA VIEJA, AYUNTAMIENTO DE JEREZ
    • Spain, Murcia, VERONICAS, SALA DE EXPOSICIONES
    • Spain, Madrid, CENTRO CULTURAL GALILEO
    • Spain, Bilbao, MUSEO DE BELLAS ARTES DE BILBAO
    • Spain, Barcelona, CENTRE DE ART SANTA MONICA
  • 1993
    • Turkey, Izmir, IZFAS GALLERY
    • Turkey, Ankara, STATE FINE ARTS GALLERY
    • Turkey, Istanbul, ISTANBUL GREATER CITY MUNICIPALITY TAKSIM ART GALLERY
    • Luxembourg, Luxembourg, MUSEE NATIONAL D'HISTOIRE ET D'ART
  • 1992
    • Belgium, Brussels, EEC PRESIDENCY EXHIBITION
    • Belgium, Brussels, LA BORSCHETTE

RACHEL WHITEREAD

  • 2004
    • Brazil, Sao Paulo, MUSEU DE ARTE MODERNA
  • 2003
    • Brazil, Rio De Janeiro, MUSEU DE ARTE MODERNA

RACHEL WHITEREAD PLASTIKEN UND ZEICHNUNGEN

  • 2005
    • Germany, Schwerin, STAATLICHES MUSEUM

SCULPTURE IN THE CLOSE

  • 2003
    • UK, Cambridge, JESUS COLLEGE

THE THIRD DIMENSION

  • 2009
    • UK, London, WHITECHAPEL GALLERY

WEU PRESIDENCY EXHIBITIONS

  • 1995
    • Belgium, Brussels, WESTERN EUROPEAN UNION
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