The Turner Prize returns to
Tate Britain for its 34th edition. The prize is awarded to a British artist for
an outstanding exhibition or other presentation of their work in the preceding
year as determined by a jury.
FORENSIC ARCHITECTURE
An interdisciplinary team
that includes architects, filmmakers, lawyers and scientists, Forensic
Architecture’s work uses the built environment as a starting point for
explorations into human rights violations.
The Long Duration of a
Split Second
Looped from 10.00
NAEEM MOHAIEMEN
Encompassing films,
installations, and essays, his practice investigates transnational left
politics in the period after the Second World War, the legacies of
decolonisation and the erasing and rewriting of memories of political utopias.
Tripoli Cancelled 2017 (93
min)
Starts at 10.20, 12.00,
13.40, 15.20
Two Meetings and a Funeral
2017 (89 min)
Starts at 11.00, 12.40,
14.20, 16.00
CHARLOTTE PRODGER (WINNER)
She works predominantly
with moving image, sculpture, writing and performance. Her work explores issues
surrounding queer identity, landscape, language technology and time.
BRIDGIT 2016 (33 min)
Looped to start at 10.05,
10.38, 11.11, 11.44, 12.17, 12.50, 13.23, 13.56, 14.29, 15.02, 15.35, 16.08,
16.41, 17.14
LUKE WILLIS THOMPSON
Working across film,
performance, installation and sculpture, his works tackle traumatic histories
of class, racial and social inequality, institutional violence, colonialism and
forced migration.
Cemetery of Uniforms and
Liveries 2016 (9 min 10 sec)
Autoportrait 2017 (8 min 50
sec)
_Human 2018 (9 min 30 sec)
Looped from 10.00
The 2018 jury comprises
Oliver Basciano, art critic and International Editor at ArtReview; Elena
Filipovic, Director, Kunsthalle Basel; Lisa Le Feuvre, Executive Director,
Holt-Smithson Foundation; and Tom McCarthy, novelist and writer. The winner of
the prize will be announced at an award ceremony in December 2018.
https://www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate-britain/exhibition/turner-prize-2018
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