Identity Crisis
Edition of 3
Silkscreen on paper in light box
172 x 112 cms
1994
Photographic mock-up of the cover of Hello! magazine showing the artist and his family. Presented on a light box in the style of an advertisement.
In this amusingly prescient artwork, Turk mocked-up a fake cover of HELLO! Magazine and displayed it on an advertising light box. The work foresaw how the complexities of an artist’s practice can be lost when they are used to feed a mainstream appetite for gossip, lifestyle and celebrity. Turk produced this piece before the mass media embraced the ‘Brit Art’ phenomenon and began to focus on the personalities of the most successful artists.
Exhibitions
- Paparazzi - Photographers, stars and artists - Centre Pompidou Metz, 2014
- Who What When Where How and Why - Newport Street Gallery, 2016
Essays
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Celebrity - Paul Flynn
SHOW
Celebrity - Paul Flynn
In the immediate wake of 9/11, Daily Mirror editor Piers Morgan hastily declared an end to The Celebrity Culture. His polemical wager centred on the dawn of a new age of serious thinking. It cut directly against the grain of tabloid thinking and effectively signed his own newspaper death-knell, as The Mirror’s sales fell directly into freefall.
Ignore The Celebrity Culture at your peril. Celebrate it with caution. Attempt to defy it and you will hastily become enveloped by its Faustian embrace. Seven years after declaring its end, with an irony arch enough to drive a double-decker bus under, Piers Morgan is a central figure in Britain’s Celebrity Culture. He makes his living mostly as a judge on The Celebrity Culture’s favourite medium, reality TV shows, and interviewing celebrities for a glossy magazine. Soon he will consolidate his own niche in The Celebrity Culture, replete with the requisite spray tan and teeth whitening signifiers, by hosting a chat show in which one self-made Celebrity of the age will talk to others. His brassy soundbite, so potent in the eye of international tragedy, meant nothing after all.
At the risk of glibness, just as the words were dropping