This is a survey of new and recent works by acclaimed British artist Martin Creed, including pieces commissioned by Ikon, plus associated events. It is one of Creed’s most comprehensive and ambitious exhibition to date.
Since his emergence as an artist, during the early 1990s, Creed has developed a practice characterised at once by conceptual stringency and a touching, deceptive, simplicity. Logic is often taken to humorous extremes, resulting in something that is next to nothing, or alternatively a work that is completely arresting in its effect on the audience. Creed memorably won theTurner Prize in 2001, exhibiting at Tate Britain his installation Work No. 160 (The lights going on and off, 1996), a version of which is located in Ikon’s Tower Room.
The idea of art as something distinct does not apply to the work of Martin Creed. The unpretentious realism, asserting continuity between his artistic gestures and everyday life, is powerfully obvious in Works No. 583 and 730 (the Sick and Sex films respectively, 2006 and 2007), which could not be more engaging in their stark depiction of basic human behaviour. Other works here have an irresistible charm, revealing Creed’s distinct take on life, making sense of random experience through idiosyncratic order.
Work No. 587 (2006) consists of potted cacti placed in a line according to their increasing height, ranging from ten centimetres to over two metres, whilst Work No. 670 (Orson and Sparky, 2007), features two dogs, one very small and one very large, simply walking across a studio floor. These works epitomise the artist’s amused fascination with the world and his impulse to respond with a candour that is compelling.
Elements of this exhibition contain explicit images which some people may fi nd offensive. Access to the First Floor Gallery is restricted to persons aged 18 and over. Following Ikon, the exhibition will tour to Seoul (Artsonje Centre), Hiroshima (City Museum of Contemporary Art) and Lima (Museo de Arte).
Please download the exhibition interpretation guide for this exhibition.
Martin Creed Exhibition Guide (PDF 41kb)
A catalogue, illustrated with installation photographs, will be available in November 2008 for £12.95 (including free postage and packing for
pre-orders).
Martin Creed’s exhibition is supported by The Henry Moore Foundation.