FIELD DAY SCULPTURE FROM BRITAIN

CANOE

CANOE

1982 Tony Cragg (1949 − )

Tony Cragg’s brief career as a lab technician at the National Rubber Producers Research Association in the late 1960s has often been cited as an indication of the artist-to-be’s fascination with syn¬thetic materials. In fact the laboratory did have an impact on Cragg: he was so bored by it that he began to draw to pass the time, and as a result enrolled at Cheltenham School of Art in 1969. Early works were sculptural assemblages created from rubbish and other detritus. Later the rubber factory’s influence re-emerges in Cragg’s work with Kevlar and polystyrene, which he layered, sandblasted and punctured until they became something else, something alien without past or discern¬ible future. Under his hands, mass-produced materials become sensual objects.

It was in the early 1950s that questions about the environment began to surface as a subject of serious public concern. Cragg was part of the first post-war generation drawn into the debate, and his search for new materials – often ones that could be recycled – led him to invent wholly new forms. His early works in plastic established a vocabulary of mate¬rials, objects and images, using the floor and the wall as key elements of the grammar. His innovative use of urban and industrial waste was handled with an invention that opened up a new territory for a genera¬tion of sculptors, and which Cragg himself has called ‘the new nature’. They dealt with environmental and other social issues in post-industrial Britain with verve and aplomb, and Cragg articulated the developing concern for the natural world using a witty array of scientific-looking objects – flasks, retorts, bottles, hinges, astrolobes and telescopes – and in a dazzling range of materials, from pumice to sandblasted porce¬lain. Cragg’s position as the leading figure in ‘The New Sculpture’ was confirmed at his solo exhibition held at the Whitechapel Art Gallery in 1981. In 1988, he represented Britain at the Venice Biennale, and won the Turner Prize the same year.

Canoe marks out the basic shape of the ancient watercraft, assem¬bled from broken and discarded pieces of plastic. It opens up a cyclical dialogue between material, object and image. The objects (battered cans, plastic bottles, toy trucks, laundry baskets, sink tidies) are Cragg’s sculptural materials, but they remain what they are while at the same time standing in as something else, the building blocks for a new image altogether. On an environmental level, it pictures the island nation drowning in trash of its own making, a harbinger of the plastic tidelines found on every beach and shoreline around the world. On a material level, it works its alchemical magic by translating the broken bits of plastic into a formal artistic organisation, with the unnatural and syn¬thetic greens shading delicately into neutral, then yellow, then red. A year earlier, Cragg had made one of his best-known works, Britain Seen from the North (1981),[1] also made of various plastic bits and pieces but mounted on the wall and showing a lone figure viewing an upturned map of Britain. The political comment in both these works can hardly be avoided – a comment on the deregulation and expansionism of the new Thatcher government; and with it all the rejection of older, more stable ideals.

JL

[1]. Tate Collection, London.

Published in Passports British Council Collection, British Council, London 2009

  • Accession Number P4278
  • Dimensions 800 CM LONG
  • Media MIXED MEDIA (23 GREEN PIECES & 24 RED PIECES)

Past exhibitions

MADE IN BRITAIN

  • 2012
    • Albania, Tirana, National Gallery
    • Greece, Athens, Benaki Museum
  • 2011
    • China, Suzhou Museum
    • China, Hong Kong Heritage Museum
    • China, Xian Museum
  • 2010
    • China, Sichuan Provincial Museum

PASSPORTS. IN VIAGGIO CON L'ARTE

  • 2009
    • Italy, Milan, Padglione D'arte Contemporanea

IL SETTIMO SPLENDORE LA MODERNITA DELLA MALINCONCIA

  • 2007
    • Italy, Verona, Palazzo Della Ragione

FIELD DAY SCULPTURE FROM BRITAIN

  • 2001
    • Taiwan, Taipei, Taipei Fine Arts Museum

LE MUSEE A L'HEURE ANGLAISE

  • 1999
    • France, Valenciennes, Musee Des Beaux Arts

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

VOYAGES SANS PASSEPORT

  • 1996
    • France, Calais, Le Channel, Galerie De L'Ancienne Poste

A CHANGING WORLD 50 YEARS OF SCULPTURE FROM THE BRITISH COUNCIL COLLECTION

  • 1996
    • Germany, Essen, Folkwang Museum
    • Morocco, Casablanca, Espace Wafabank
  • 1995
    • Czech Republic, Prague, Riding Hall, Prague Castle
    • Russia, Moscow, New Tretyakov Museum
  • 1994
    • Russia, St Petersburg, The Russian Museum

1983 SAO PAULO BIENAL - TRANSFORMATIONS

  • 1984
    • Portugal, Lisbon, Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation
    • Mexico, Mexico City, Museo De Arte Moderno
    • Brazil, Rio De Janeiro, Museu De Arte Moderna
  • 1983
    • Brazil, Sao Paulo, Sao Paulo Bienal

TEMA CELESTE

  • 1983
    • Italy, Gibellina, Museo Civico D'arte Contemporanear Di Gibellina

LECONS DE CHOSES

  • 1982
    • France, Chambery, Musee Savoisien
    • Switzerland, Berne, Kunsthalle
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