
About Semi-detached
| The making of Semi-detached
| Tate
Magazine article
Installation at Tate Britain
Photo © Tate, 2004 |
18 May - 12 December 2004
Duveen Galleries
Supported by Tate Members with additional support from The Henry Moore Foundation
Michael Landy has created an ambitious
new installation for Tate Britain’s Duveen Galleries. This is the latest in an ongoing series of biennial
sculpture commissions whose previous contributors include Mona Hatoum
and Anya Gallaccio. The series builds on a long tradition of exhibitions
in the Duveen Galleries, which has included memorable installations
by Richard Long, Richard Serra and Luciano Fabro. |
Semi-detached, a major site-specific installation, takes as its
focus the artist’s father, a former tunnel miner incapacitated
by an industrial accident twenty-five years ago. Through sculpture,
video and sound Landy invokes broader questions of value and usefulness,
employment and purpose. This major project is Landy’s first
since Breakdown 2001, his most celebrated work to date, which took
place in a former high-street department store in central London.
After creating a meticulous inventory of all his possessions, Landy
set about systematically destroying them over a two-week period
in what he described as a consumerist experiment in identity. This
followed a series of theatrically spectacular installations which
examined and challenged attitudes to contemporary consumerism, often
exposing the less palatable aspects of the society in which we live.
Landy was born in London in 1963, where he continues to live and
work. He studied at Loughborough College of Art (1981-3) and Goldsmiths
College, London (1985-8). He participated in the group exhibition
Freeze (1988), subsequently becoming a key figure in the generation
of British artists whose work grew in prominence throughout the
1990s. His first major project, Market 1990, comprised a large scale
assembly of generic market-stall stands, artificial grass and plastic
bread crates in a vast disused industrial space in south London.
Scrapheap Services 1995, now in the Tate Collection, is a room-sized
installation presenting a fictional people-cleansing company, a
satire of a sanitised society. Most recently Landy produced Nourishment,
a series of meticulous etchings of weeds that explores notions of
decay and fragility.
Landy has been included in numerous group shows in this country
and abroad, most recently Micro/Macro: British Art 1996-2002, organised
by the British Council for the Mucsarnok Kunsthalle, Budapest (2003);
Shopping: Art and Consumer Culture, at the Kunstverein Frankfurt
and Tate Liverpool (2002-3) and the São Paulo Bienal (2002).
A fully illustrated catalogue (Tate Publishing) will accompany
the exhibition featuring essays by Judith Nesbitt, Head of Exhibitions
and Displays, Tate Britain, and John Slyce, critic and writer.
Why not combine your visit to Semi-detached with one of these related events?
There is a something to do for everyone - follow the links below to find out more and book tickets.
Talks and discussions
Tate Forum Meet the Artist: Michael Landy Wednesday 23 June
Michael Landy: British Artist's Talk Wednesday 22 September
Films
Making Semi-detached: Daily throughout the installation
Tate Magazine Article
Artist Project:
Michael Landy's Weeds by Heidi Reitmaier
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