British artist Gillian Wearing creates site-specific installation at the ICA/Boston
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Monday, September 15, 2025


British artist Gillian Wearing creates site-specific installation at the ICA/Boston
Gillian Wearing, Rock n Roll 70, 2015/2016. Framed c-type prints, 51 3/8 x 75 3/8 inches. Courtesy the artist, Maureen Paley, London, and Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, New York. © 2016 Gillian Wearing.



BOSTON, MASS.- Gillian Wearing (b. 1963, Birmingham, UK) has created Rock ‘n’ Roll 70 (2015/2016), a monumental, site-specific photographic mural for the Institute of Contemporary Art/Boston’s Sandra and Gerald Fineberg Art Wall. On view from December 9, 2016 through January 1, 2018, this new work is the first presentation in Boston of the celebrated artist’s work and was organized by Eva Respini, Barbara Lee Chief Curator, with Jessica Hong, Curatorial Assistant.

Best known for her photographic and video works that intimately capture aspects of our familial and personal histories, Wearing began her career photographing strangers she encountered on London’s streets and continues to explore the nuances of identity, the intersections of public and private, and the performativity of self. Over her career, Wearing has also mined her own life and history, having meticulously sculpted masks of her loved ones and donned them to create eerie self-portraits as her brother, mother, or her own self at an earlier age.

For Rock ‘n’ Roll 70, Wearing asked individuals working with age-progressing technology to digitally enhance one of her self-portraits created at age 50 (her current age) to see what she might look like at age 70. Printed as wallpaper, these aged portraits show the diversity of possibilities of the artist’s future self. They differ slightly or drastically from each other, revealing the limitations of what we believe to be pioneering technology, exploring how identity can be represented, and further emphasizing the uncertainty of what lies ahead.

On top of the wallpaper hangs a framed triptych of photographic portraits, consisting of Wearing at her current age, an enhanced portrait, and a blank space, as the artist intends to make a self-portrait when she turns 70 to complete the triptych. In a world oversaturated by images, particularly “selfies,” Wearing explores the complexities of identity mediated through technology, which is a topic that’s more urgent than ever.

The ICA’s Sandra and Gerald Fineberg Art Wall is dedicated to site-specific works by leading contemporary artists, commissioned annually. Located along the eastern interior wall of the museum’s glass-enclosed lobby, the most public space in the museum, the Art Wall is the visitor’s first encounter with art upon entering the building. Wearing’s photographic mural highlights the diverse range of possibilities for the Art Wall, a fitting site for this installation as it further collapses the public and private spheres. Rock ‘n’ Roll 70 will explore the lobby as a psychological space—the artist’s portraits are confrontational and alluring, discomfiting and thought-provoking.

Based in London, Wearing gained critical attention after winning the acclaimed Turner Prize in 1997. She was nominated for the Vincent Award presented by the Gemeentemuseum/GEM in The Hague, Netherlands (2014) and for the Liberty Human Rights Awards for her public sculpture A Real Birmingham Family (2014). Since the early 1990s, Wearing has been working primarily in video and photography, utilizing the public as her subject matter to investigate what we as private individuals carry with us in the public sphere. With the Internet boom and social media explosion, the public and private realms have all but collapsed. This has become a dominant theme for many contemporary artists and a significant issue for the culture-at-large. Wearing describes her methodology as “editing life,” similar to how we present ourselves to our online public. However, unlike reality culture of our day, which is full of judgment and emotive responses, the artist photographs her subjects and herself with as little subjectivity as possible, contrasting with the type of online personas we wish to portray.










Today's News

December 19, 2016

Lost treasures of Syria's Palmyra rise again in new 3D show at the Grand Palais

Foam opens overview of the work of Japanese artist Hiroshi Sugimoto

Metropolitan Museum of Art opens first retrospective exhibition devoted to the Indian artist Y. G. Srimati

°CLAIR Gallery presents Halsman: Facets and Faces

Redwood Library and Athenæ um presents master drawings, Renaissance to contemporary

Kerlin Gallery opens exhibition of new work by Siobhán Hapaska

Outfits worn by Baroness Thatcher go on display at the V&A

"Regarding Africa: Contemporary Art and Afro-Futurism" on view at the Tel Aviv Museum of Art

Large-scale musical installation by Sam Taylor-Johnson on view at Museum Voorlinden

Hollywood legend Zsa Zsa Gabor dead at 99: husband

Images from the Jewish Ghetto on view at Museum at Eldridge Street

Rare and precious items abound in Don Presley's New Year's auction, Dec. 31-Jan. 1

Baltimore Museum of Art opens "Shifting Views: People & Politics in Contemporary African Art"

The Museum of Contemporary Art Australia celebrates twenty-five years of Primavera

Specters and Experiments: Ludwig Museum exhibits paintings by Attila Szűcs

Imagine Picasso lighting the Arches of Harlem: A new lighting system for art installations

Witness to history: Bangladesh's oldest jail opens to public

Anacostia Community Museum's newest exhibition examines explosive Latinx growth

2016 Dolf Henkes Award exhibition opens at TENT Rotterdam

New display at the Museum of London traces the capital's obsession with ice skating

National Air and Space Museum displays suit worn on record-breaking jump

British artist Gillian Wearing creates site-specific installation at the ICA/Boston

Priscilla Lovat Fraser to be the new director of the MAK Center for Art and Architecture, Los Angeles

Eiffel Tower reopens after five-day strike




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 




Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)


Editor: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful