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April |
But Is It Art?
The Turner Prize short list has arrived. (See also this Reuters article.)
I'm sure no one is too surprised at the typically controversial list—recitations of porn film plots, random conceptual projects generated by a computer (such as a KFC menu cast in lead), et cetera. It's what we've come to expect from the Turner.
Two things, however, are especially interesting this year.
First, the list is actually rather less unusual than normal. While the Reuters story attempts to make much of photographer Catherine Yass's choice of subject matter—hospital corridors, toilets,etc.—the fact remains that her choice of medium is far from shocking and her work is nowhere near the bafflingly conceptual levels of most Turner short-listers. Likewise, Liam Gillick's constructed sculptural installations and furniture come nowhere near the pickled-sheep, mussed-bed pinnacles of past Turner shock value.
"Why should this be?" you may ask. It's all due to the second novelty of this year's Turner:
This year the public were asked for the first time to nominate artists. More than 500 names were put forward: three of the four who made it on to the shortlist were public choices.
It seems almost certain that Yass and Gillick were among the public choices. Still, novelties aside, this year's Turner promises to be as entertainingly odd as ever.
Those wacky Brits!