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New Work by Turner Prize Nominated Artist, Cornelia Parker, Loses Wing in Cuts Campaign |
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The work shows Antony Gormleys celebrated Angel of the North with one of its wings lopped off.
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LONDON.- A new work by Turner Prize nominated artist, Cornelia Parker, created specially for the campaign led by artists against funding cuts, was released today.
The work shows Antony Gormleys celebrated Angel of the North with one of its wings lopped off. The caption reads: Why clip the wings of an industry that is soaring? Its a false economy to cut the arts.
Nominated for the Turner Prize in 1997, Cornelia Parker has became known for her installations and interventions, including Cold Dark Matter: An Exploded View 1991 (Tate Modern) where she suspended the fragments of a garden shed, blown up for her by the British Army, and The Maybe, a collaboration with actress Tilda Swinton, at the Serpentine Gallery in 1995. In 2003 she wrapped Rodins Kiss with a mile of a string to make a new work The Distance (a kiss with string attached) for her contribution to the Tate Triennial.
She has had recent solo exhibitions at Baltic, Gateshead (2010), the Whitechapel Gallery laboratory (2008) Ikon Gallery, Birmingham (2007) and the Museo De Arte de Lima, Peru (2008). Her work was included in the 16th Sydney Biennale (2008) and in the 8th Sharjah Biennial, UAE (2007). She has works in the Tate Collection and in numerous public and private collections in Europe and the USA. She is represented by Frith Street Gallery, London and DAmelio Terras, New York.
Each week the work of a different artist, created in response to the campaign, is released. The campaign was launched 10 September with a new video by David Shrigley and a campaign poster by Jeremy Deller, Scott King and William Morris. This was followed by new works by Mark Wallinger and Yinka Shonibare.
Supporters of the artists campaign are being asked to sign a petition which will be sent to the Culture Secretary, Jeremy Hunt. It points out that it has taken 50 years to create a vibrant arts culture in Britain that is the envy of the world and appeals to the government not to slash arts funding and risk destroying this long-term achievement and the social and economic benefits it brings to all.
The artists acknowledge that reasonable cuts and efficiencies are necessary but they fear that the 25% cuts being proposed will destroy much of what has been achieved and will have a particularly damaging impact on national and regional museums and their collections.
The campaign is being organised by the London branch of a national consortium of over 2,000 arts organisations and artists dedicated to working together and finding new ways to support the arts in the UK.
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Today's News
October 5, 2010
Tate Britain in London Shows Works by the Four Artists Competing for the Turner Prize
The Onassis Cultural Center in New York Explores the Role of Heroes in Society
Modern Works by Artist Joan Miró Displayed at Metropolitan Museum with Dutch Old Master Paintings
Sotheby's Hong Kong Fine Chinese 2010 Autumn Sale Fetches US$52.2 Million
New Work by Turner Prize Nominated Artist, Cornelia Parker, Loses Wing in Cuts Campaign
Sidney Nolan's Antarctic Paintings on Display at the Polar Museum in Cambridge
More than 60 Rare and Unpublished Photographs by Richard Avedon Set for Auction
First Kristin Baker Exhibition in an American Museum Opens at Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Fire Virtually Destroys Southeastern England Landmark 19th-Century Hastings Pier
First Day of Historic Three-Day Attic Sale at Chatsworth Realises US$7 Million
As 'Peanuts' Turn 60, Schulz Family Plans Future - More TV Specials and New Film
Important Whistler and Old Master Prints at Swann Galleries' Three-Part Print Auction
Portland-based Artist to Exhibit for Art For Arts' Sake Opening of the New Orleans Art Season
Baba Bling: The Peranakan Chinese of Singapore at the Musée du Quai Branly
Rainer Fetting's "Manscapes", Painted between 1974 and 2010, on View at Kunsthalle Tubingen
Sears Wants to Buy Back Willis Tower Sculpture Made by Alexander Calder
"Father of Indonesian Modernism" - S. Sudjojono's A New Dawn Sold for an Impressive US$1.4 Million at Sotheby's.
Maryhill Museum of Art Announces Plans for First Expansion in 70-Year History
Christie's Hosts a Public Art Exhibition Showing Highlights of Modern Middle Eastern Art
100-Year-Old Pennsylvania Museum Time Capsule Found Spoiled
The Grammy Museum Premieres Its Latest Exhibit: John Lennon, Songwriter
Chinese Collectors Smash Estimates At Sotheby's Contemporary Asian Art Auction In Hong Kong
Exceptional Painting by George Stubbs to Be Offered for Sale at Sotheby's London in December
Scotland + Venice Announces Karla Black to Represent Scotland at 54th Venice Biennale
First Solo Display of Work by Photographer Mary McCartney at the National Portrait Gallery
Christie's Presents the Stuart Collection of Magnificent Regency Silver
Exhibition at the Museo Picasso in Malaga Explores the Toys of the Avant-Garde
Fine Art Asia 2010: A Bridge between Tradition and Modernity, East and West Returns for 6th Edition
A Life-Size Bronze Sculpture by Henri Matisse Could Fetch $35 Million at Auction
Painting by Marc Chagall Breaks Record at Seoul Auction's Modern and Contemporary Art Sale
Inverted, Upside-Down, Contorted: Mirror Images in New Exhibition at Phæno in Wolfsburg
Muhammad Ali Memorabilia to Raise Over £7K for Parkinson's United Kingdom at Bonhams
La Belle Romaine to Lead Sotheby's November 2010 Impressionist & Modern Art Evening Sale
Well-Known Austrian Architect Dies
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