A lose adaptation of the Samuel Beckett play, Waiting For Godot, Waiting For Gavo is a slapstick take on the uneasy, often absurd but ultimately co-dependent relationship between artists and the art market in the form of a surreal puppet show of Turk's own invention. Here the mysterious Godot is replaced by the equally elusive Gavo, while Vladimir, Estragon, Pozzo and Lucky become hand made puppet caricatures of Duchamp, Beuys, Charles Saatchi as "Scratchy" and Andy (Warhol), respectively - each with a face bearing an uncanny similarity to Turk. Following in the foot steps of multi-layered Turk works such as Pop and the Death of Marat, where Turk role plays famous characters from art history, Waiting For Gavo finds Turk in the role of both puppet and puppet master. Using the blunt instrument of caricature to open up the complex philosophical and political questions about art, identity, value and meaning, Waiting For Gavo playfully explores the paradox of the artist's power to control his own fate on the one hand and his powerlessness in the face of it, on the other.
Essays
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The Fool - Hari Kunzru
SHOW
The Fool - Hari Kunzru
“This work I call a looking glass
In which each fool shall see an ass…
Whoever sees with open eyes
Cannot regard himself as wise
For he shall see upon reflection
That humans teem with imperfection”
Sebastian Brant “The Ship of Fools” 1494
Who is the fool? In the tarot pack, he is shown as a figure setting out on a journey, with a bundle on his back and a little dog tugging at his ragged clothes. Sometimes he is about to step off a cliff. The dog, symbol of social domesticity, is trying to drag him back home. But is the fool making a mistake, or taking a leap of faith? Is he actually wise? Verbal and visual genealogies of the fool link him with other figures – the beggar, the madman, the mascot, the scapegoat, the seer, the poet. Many of these figures intersect with Romantic images of the creative artist: the inspired outsider, at once absurd and magnificent. So, among other things, the fool is an artist, and the artist is a fool.
As a historical figure, the court fool is a parasite, a professional dinner guest. In Ancient Greece, parasitos was originally a