A photograph of the artist from the neck up with his eyes closed.
This photograph shares formal characteristics with the work of several recent German photographers who produce large scale, frontal portraits against blank backgrounds. Unlike these other images though, Turk’s work is a self portrait, showing the artist with his eyes closed: viewers can scrutinise the minutest detail of the face, but his death mask visage gives little away. Although the title states that Turk is never able to see himself with his eyes closed, other viewers also come away with the feeling that they haven’t really seen the artist; the fine detail is in the photograph has revealed nothing of the subject.
Exhibitions
- The Stuff Show - South London Gallery, 1998
- Something I’ll Never Really See - 2009
- Self: Image and Identity: Self-Portraiture from Van Dyck to Louise Bourgeois - Turner Contemporary, 2015
Essays
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Which Came First? - Rachel Newsome
SHOW
Which Came First? - Rachel Newsome
To begin at the end. In a sky-lit wood-panelled room inside the Royal College of Art mounted on an otherwise empty wall in an otherwise empty room, a blue ceramic English heritage plaque reads “Gavin Turk, Sculptor, worked here 1989 – 1991”. A commemoration of a life, it marks the presence of the artist with the most powerful and evocative of the tools that might be at his disposal - his absence. The curtain has fallen. The titles are rolling. Gavin Turk has left the stage. Death as performance. While the absence of the artist, we make the art.
The artist is no more and all that is left for the audience in this empty white space is to reverently imagine the work which once filled this space, while apprehending that the emptiness is the work. And so material object of the plaque frames the space and the art work frames the artist, the one somehow preceding the other in an elliptical sleight of hand, as the end frames the beginning. The artist is dead. Long live art!
To kill yourself off before your career has even begun is a particularly punk thing to do (never