格文‧托克

格文‧托克1967年生于英格兰吉尔福德。1989至91年就读皇家艺术学院,现于伦敦生活和工作。

《洞穴》(1995) 是托克在皇家艺术学院硕士毕业时的作品复制版本,此作亦正是令他无法毕业的原因。在空空如也的工作室里,托克只挂起一块模仿英国文化遗产委员会的蓝色小牌匾,上面写着「肯辛顿区 雕塑家 格文‧托克 1989-1991年 曾在此工作」。这类牌匾通常挂在名人故居外面以作纪念,并须符合多项条件才可挂上,其中一项是要该名人已逝世二十年或以上,并且「对人类繁荣和福祉作出过重大贡献」。当时托克的事业尚未开始,他挂上牌匾,是要尝试预示自己的成就。这行动将工作室转为装置空间,因着牌匾带有隆重意味,而改变了我们对空间的感知。毕业试委员会认为托克这件作品「未能符合毕业试要求的水平」,复核后决定不授予其硕士学位。

离开学院后,托克继续这创作路向,主要探究权属、真实性和身份等问题,且常以自己为主角。作品《流行》(1993) 是其中一个最典型的例子,托克以真人大小的蜡像,展示自己化身成年轻摇滚明星席德.维瑟斯正在高唱猫王埃尔维斯.皮礼士利「我的路」时的姿势,而安迪.华荷亦曾描绘这个猫王形象。作品《面孔》(2004)亦同样仿效了安迪.华荷的创作技法。1980年代,华荷以他的对手德国艺术家约瑟夫.波以斯的面孔,制作了一幅版画以挑战其可信性。托克不忌讳地以这种手法,制作了六幅人像,乍看之下以为是埃尔维斯.皮礼士利、哲古华拉,以及约瑟夫.波以斯。但细看究竟,画中人其实是托克作了偶像人物打扮的造型(其玩味的标题也提供了线索,例如将「哲古华拉」写成「倒转葛华拉」),藉此再一次对身份概念提出质疑。

托克的作品,曾参与1997年伦敦皇家美术学院举办的「感觉:萨奇英国青年艺术家藏品」展,影响非常深远。其后他的作品亦在多个个展及联展中展出,包括:「白色大象」(辛基利画廊,纽约,2004);「物质文化」(海华特画廊,伦敦,1997)。

Gavin Turk

Gavin Turk was born in 1967 in Guildford, England. He attended the Royal College of Art, London between 1989 and 1991 and currently lives and works in London.

Cave (1995) is a reworked replication of a piece that caused Turk to fail his Masters at the Royal College of Art. As part of his degree show presentation, he simply presented an empty studio space with just a blue imitation English Heritage plaque hanging on the wall. The plaque bore the words “Borough of Kensington GAVIN TURK Sculptor Worked Here 1989-1991”. These plaques are usually found on the exteriors of buildings to commemorate once famous inhabitants. Conditions of being awarded this plaque are, amongst other criteria, that you must have been dead for at least twenty years and “have made an important contribution to human welfare or happiness”. By presenting the plaque, Turk attempted to validate his future importance to society before his career had even begun. By turning his studio into an installation space he also changed the way that the space was perceived, the plaque giving it an apparent air of significance. The Final Examination Board decided that Turk had “displayed insufficient work of the standard required for Final Examination” and so, following re-examination, refused to award him an MA certificate.

Upon leaving college, Turk continued his career in a similar vein, working around the central themes of authorship, authenticity and identity, often casting himself as the main subject of his work. An example of this can be found in one of Turk’s most well-known works Pop (1993), where the artist adopts the identity of young punk icon Sid Vicious as a life-size waxwork singing “My Way” in the pose of Elvis Presley, as once depicted by Andy Warhol. The reference to Warhol is again apparent in his Faces (2004) portfolio. Turk unashamedly copies the techniques of the American artist who, in the 1980s, created a similar print of his rival, German artist Joseph Beuys, as a way to mock his credibility. The set of six images, shown here, appear to be that of Elvis Presley, Che Guevera and Joseph Beuys but upon closer inspection (and with clues such as the play on words in the titles such as “Gavara Reversed”) it is actually Turk himself made up to look like the iconic images, again questioning the notion of identity.

Turk’s work was included in the influential exhibition Sensation: Young British Artists from the Saatchi Collection in 1997 at the Royal Academy of Arts, London. His work has been included in many group and solo exhibitions including the White Elephant, Sean Kelly, New York, 2004, and Material Culture, Hayward Gallery, London, 1997.