FAD Magazine

FAD Magazine covers contemporary art – News, Exhibitions and Interviews reported on from London

Turner Prize 2022 opens @TateLiverpool

Tate Liverpool has opened an exhibition of work by the four artists nominated for the Turner Prize 2022: Heather Phillipson, Ingrid Pollard, Veronica Ryan and Sin Wai Kin.

Sin Wai Kin, A Dream of Wholeness In Parts, S
Sin Wai Kin, A Dream of Wholeness in Parts (still) 2021 © the artist. Courtesy the artist, Chi-Wen Gallery, Taipei and Soft Opening, London. Produced by Chi-Wen Productions, Taipei. Supported by Hayward Gallery Touring for British Art Show 9

The prize is returning to Liverpool for the first time in 15 years having helped launch the city’s year as European Capital of Culture. The winner will be announced on 7th December at an award ceremony at St George’s Hall, Liverpool.

Turner Prize 2022 : Heather Phillipson Rupture No 6: biting the blowtorched peach Installation View at Tate Liverpool 2022. Photo: © Tate Photography (Matt Greenwood
Turner Prize 2022 : Heather Phillipson Rupture No 6: biting the blowtorched peach Installation View at Tate Liverpool 2022. Photo: © Tate Photography (Matt Greenwood

HEATHER PHILLIPSON presents RUPTURE NO 6: biting the blowtorched peach, 2022. Reimagining her 2020 Tate Britain’s Duveen Galleries commission, Phillipson conjures what she calls ‘a maladapted ecosystem, an insistent atmosphere.’

Turner Prize 2022 : Heather Phillipson Rupture No 6: biting the blowtorched peach Installation View at Tate Liverpool 2022. Photo: © Tate Photography (Matt Greenwood
Turner Prize 2022 : Heather Phillipson Rupture No 6: biting the blowtorched peach Installation View at Tate Liverpool 2022. Photo: © Tate Photography (Matt Greenwood

Charged with colour, video and kinetic sculpture, and augmented with a brand-new audio composition, Phillipson proposes her space at Tate Liverpool as alive and happening in a parallel time-zone. It is, she says, ‘a whole new season’. Phillipson’s audacious and wide-ranging practice often involves collisions of wildly different materials, media and gestures in what she describes as ‘quantum thought experiments’.

Turner Prize 2022 : Ingrid Pollard:
Turner Prize 2022 : Ingrid Pollard: Seventeen of Sixty Eight , Installation View at Tate Liverpool 2022. Photo: © Tate Photography (Matt Greenwood

INGRID POLLARD works primarily in photography, but also sculpture, film and sound to question our relationship with the natural world and interrogate ideas such as Britishness, race and sexuality. For the Turner Prize, Pollard presents Seventeen of Sixty Eight 2018, developed from decades of research into racist depictions of ‘the African’ on pub signs, ephemeral objects, within literature and in surrounding landscapes. Bow Down and Very Low – 123 2021 includes a trio of kinetic sculptures using everyday objects to reference power dynamics though their gestures, while the photo series DENY: IMAGINE: ATTACK 1991 and SILENCE 2019 look at the language of power, both emotional and physical.

Turner Prize , 2022, Veronica Ryan, Installation view at Tate Liverpool © Tate Photography, Sonal Bakarina
Turner Prize , 2022, Veronica Ryan, Installation view at Tate Liverpool © Tate Photography, Sonal Bakarina

VERONICA RYAN presents cast forms in clay and bronze; sewn and tea-stained fabrics; and bright neon crocheted fishing line pouches filled with a variety of seeds, fruit stones and skins to reference displacement, fragmentation and alienation. Rather than having fixed meanings, Ryan’s work is typically open to a wide variety of readings, as implied by titles such as Multiple Conversations 2019–21 or Along a Spectrum 2021. Made during a residency at Spike Island, the forms she creates take recognisable elements and materials – such as fruit, takeaway food containers, feathers, or paper – and reconfigure them, exploring ecology, history and dislocation, as well as the psychological impact of the pandemic.

Sin Wai Kin, A Dream of Wholeness in Parts (still) 2021 © the artist. Courtesy the artist, Chi-Wen Gallery, Taipei and Soft Opening, London. Produced by Chi-Wen Productions, Taipei. Supported by Hayward Gallery Touring for British Art Show 9
Sin Wai Kin, A Dream of Wholeness in Parts (still) 2021 © the artist. Courtesy the artist, Chi-Wen Gallery, Taipei and Soft Opening, London. Produced by Chi-Wen Productions, Taipei. Supported by Hayward Gallery Touring for British Art Show 9

SIN WAI KIN brings fantasy to life through storytelling in performance, moving image, and ephemera. Their work realises fictional narratives to describe lived realities of desire, identification, and consciousness.

Turner Prize 2022: Sin Wai Kin Taking off the Construct day 1, Taking off the Construct day 1 (2), Taking off the Universe day 2 Installation View at Tate Liverpool 2022. Photo: © Tate Photography (Sonal Bakrania)
Turner Prize 2022: Sin Wai Kin Taking off the Construct day 1, Taking off the Construct day 1 (2), Taking off the Universe day 2 Installation View at Tate Liverpool 2022. Photo: © Tate Photography (Sonal Bakrania)

For the Turner Prize, Sin presents three films, including A Dream of Wholeness in Parts 2021 in which traditional Chinese philosophy and dramaturgy intersects with contemporary drag, music and poetry; In It’s Always You 2021 the artist adopts the roles of four boyband members, striving to take on the multiplicity of identities that transcend constructed binaries, while Today’s Top Stories, sees Sin playing the character of The Storyteller, posing as a news anchor who recites philosophical propositions on existence, consciousness, naming and identity.

I’m excited to be unveiling work by these four outstanding artists at Tate Liverpool for this year’s Turner Prize. This is a diverse group of artists, each with a singular vision, who are all dealing with important issues facing our society today and together their work combines to create a fascinating and vibrant exhibition.

Helen Legg, Director of Tate Liverpool and Co-chair of the Turner Prize 2022 jury.

The Turner Prize was established in 1984 and is awarded each year to a British artist for an outstanding exhibition or other presentation of their work. The Turner Prize award is £55,000 with £25,000 going to the winner and £10,000 each to the other shortlisted artists.

The members of the Turner Prize 2022 jury are Irene Aristizábal, Head of Curatorial and Public Practice, BALTIC; Christine Eyene, Research Fellow, School of Arts and Media, UCLan; Robert Leckie, Director, Spike Island; and Anthony Spira, Director, MK Gallery.

The Turner Prize 2022 is curated by Sarah James, Senior Curator, Tate Liverpool, and Matthew Watts, Assistant Curator, Tate Liverpool.

The Turner Prize 2022, 20th October 2022 – 19th March 2023, Tate Liverpool

Next year the Turner Prize 2023 will be hosted by Towner Eastbourne as the centrepiece of the gallery’s centenary programme from 28th September 2023 to 14th January 2024.

The Turner Prize 2022 is supported by BNP Paribas with additional support from Taylor Wessing, Avanti West Coast, Mylands, Sennheiser, The John Browne Charitable Trust, The Uggla Family Foundation and Roisin and James Timpson OBE.

Categories

Tags

Related Posts

Trending Articles

Join the FAD newsletter and get the latest news and articles straight to your inbox

* indicates required