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Fergal Stapleton (born 1961, Ireland) is a contemporary artist living and working in London. Stapleton studied at Middlesex Polytechnic (now Middlesex University) and graduated from the MA Programme at Goldsmiths College, London in 1993. Between 1994 and 1997 he collaborated on a number of works with Turner Prize nominee Rebecca Warren. Stuart Morgan (art critic) on Stapleton's 1993 show "His manner of entertaining us…the worst thing I have ever done." (Frieze, No. 10, May 1993): 'The logic of dandyism as a mode of conceptual art assumes a view of the dandy not as engaged in a foppish, decadent pursuit but as an attempt to get over class distinction by creating one's own aristocracy, doing what aristocrats do but doing it better, secure in the knowledge that their order and the natural superiority it implies is on a false premise.’ JJ Charlesworth on Stapleton's 2007 show, "And a Door Opened", (TimeOut No. 1924): 'Stapleton's excellent show… produces a rare insight into the difference between images and objects, and how mere junk changes into art… They're inches away, but seem to inhabit a distant, unattainably parallel universe. Stapleton is an often overlooked talent… often eclipsed by the raucous posturings of his YBA contemporaries. Compared with the tired bombast of Damien Hirst's animal vitrines – pictures masquerading as objects – these extraordinary experiments in material transfiguration show how sculptural poetry is still alive and well… Stapleton's great skill lies in showing how art works in the reordering of things known, producing new, unexpected value out of the slightest of means.'() Stapleton has been an occasional lecturer on the MA Fine Art programmes at Goldsmiths College, University of London, Birmingham Institute of Art & Design, Birmingham City University, and the Slade School of Fine Art. He has also contributed to the art review section of TimeOut magazine (Nos. 1418 & 1421–1425). Stapleton is additionally a director of V22 Foundation. Stapleton is additionally the author of a novel titled ''After the Death of the Goat God (Key Principles in History 2)'' ISBN 978-0956441928 Stapleton is represented by Carl Freedman Gallery, London, where he has had five solo shows, ''I Shall Arrive Soon'' in 2003, ''Stapleton Grey'' (which he described as ''an exhibition of paintings of interior twilights, ash atmospherics, hope expressed in loose change, woozy surface mix-ups, semi-curious squints at uncertain shapes and irrelevant light-sources'') in 2006, ''And a Door Opened'' in 2007, ''dOr'' in 2010, and ''2moro'' in 2014. ==Solo exhibitions (selected)== * ''2moro'' (Carl Freedman Gallery, 2014) * ''dOr'' (Carl Freedman Gallery, 2010) * ''If one good deed in all my life I did, I do repent it from my very soul'' (V22, London 2009) * ''Art Show'' (in V22 Presents:The Wharf Rd Project 2008) * ''Open Space'' (Art Cologne, 2008) * ''And a Door Opened'' (Carl Freedman Gallery, 2007) * ''Stapleton Grey'' (Counter Gallery, London, 2006) * ''Sunny Side Up'' (The Audrey Reynolds Plinth, Throgmorton's, London, 2004) * ''I Shall Arrive Soon'' (Counter Gallery, London, 2003) * ''Crack Whore'' (Five Years, London, 2002) * ''Bad Ape Report'' (Neon gallery Billboard, London, 2001) * ''This'' (Platform, London, 2000) * ''The Tears'' (Riutsu Centre, Tokyo, 1996) * ''Tonight'' (The Agency, London, 1995) * ''His manner of entertaining us...the worst thing I have ever done'' (The Agency, London, 1993) 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Fergal Stapleton」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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