Object

BOX THAT DOESN'T CLOSE

BOX THAT DOESN'T CLOSE

1967 Michael Craig-Martin (1941 − )

Craig Martin’s work is concerned with fundamental questions about the nature of art, about representation, authorship and the role of the viewer. He explores these themes primarily through commonplace objects, both real and as images. In his best known work influenced by Marcel Duchamp; An Oak Tree, 1973 (Tate Collection www.tate.org.uk), he claimed to have changed a glass of water on a glass shelf into an oak tree. His series of large wall drawings, whilst depicting real objects in linear form are abstracted modes of language, more concerned with how we contextualize objects and the narratives they form than the design of the item itself.

Likewise, his ‘box progression’ series takes the language of minimal sculptural form as the starting point for an exploration into self referential autonomous objects. The work exists as both sculptural objects rendered in Formica, and graphite drawings on graph paper, both series questioning our expectations of what art could be, and the meanings inherent in the domestic object and imagery drawn from post-industrialized society.

 

  • Accession Number P1712
  • Dimensions 27 X 40.5 CM
  • Media PENCIL AND FABLON ON GRAPH PAPER

Glossary

  • Design

    The arrangement of elements or details in an artefact or a work of art.

Theme

Past exhibitions

CONTEMPORARY BRITISH DRAWINGS 1961-1975

  • 1989
    • Thailand, Chiangmai University Gallery
    • Thailand, Bangkok, Chulalongkorn University Art Centre
  • 1988
    • Singapore, National Museum Art Gallery
  • 1983
    • Australia, Australia
  • 1978
    • Germany, West Germany
  • 1976
    • Colombia, Colombia
    • Argentina, Buenos Aires, British Council Office - Buenos Aires
  • 1975
    • Brazil, Brazil

11 ENGLISCHE ZEICHNER

  • 1973
    • Belgium, Antwerp, Koninklijk Museum Voor Schone Kunsten
    • Germany, Bremen, Kunsthalle
    • Germany, Baden Baden, Kunsthalle
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