Gilbert and George to be awarded at the Florence Biennale

Released on = May 21, 2007, 2:33 am

Press Release Author = Studio Abba

Industry = Education

Press Release Summary = The acclaimed artists Gilbert & George will be awarded the
Lorenzo il Magnifico prize at the Florence Biennale of Contemporary Art in December
2007

Press Release Body = Florence, Italy - The sixth edition of the Florence Biennale of
Contemporary Art will take place at the historic Fortezza da Basso from 1st - 9th
December, 2007. This year's edition will include, as honoured guests, the acclaimed
artists Gilbert & George and from the White Cube Gallery London, Tim Marlow. Gilbert
& George will be awarded the Lorenzo il Magnifico prize on 4th December.

On the successful wave of their exhibition at the Tate Gallery in London, Gilbert &
George will come to Florence together with Tim Marlow, exhibitions director of the
White Cube Gallery London, protagonist of the famous BBC programs dedicated to the
art world, Rolf on art, founder of the Tate Magazine, and now collaborator on
Channel Five, where he presents a program on current exhibitions. Tim Marlow has
published several books and important artists monographs such as Auguste Rodin and
Egon Schiele. He writes for various magazines and newspapers such as The Times, The
Guardian, The Independent on Sunday, Art Monthly, etc.

Gilbert & George will meet the 800 artists participating at the Biennale and
visitors to the Biennale, as part of the rich calendar of conferences, meetings,
video-projections. A video-documentary produced by Gilbert & George will be shown
during the Florence Biennale and Tim Marlow along with Gilbert & George will give a
talk about their life and work.

Since 2001, the Biennale, collaborates with the United Nations, as an official
participant of the Dialogue Among Nations program. Former Secretary General Kofi
Annan wrote in support of the program:

I believe that dialogue is an opportunity for people who come from diverse cultures
and traditions to know each other better whether they live on opposite sides of the
world or on the same street.


The International Scientific Committee, composed of 20 qualified members, chooses
the artists and places their work into one of the categories: painting, sculpture,
graphic art, mixed media, installation pieces, photography and digital art. The
selection is decided upon with no prejudice towards style. The artists are selected
based on the quality of their artwork and the cultural values their work represents.
The International Jury that assigns recognitions and awards to the invited artists
is composed of distinguished figures such Emmanuel von Lauenstein Massarani,
artistic director of The Biennale; Stefano Francolini, Art Historian and Critic,
Direttore settore restauro Opificio delle Pietre Dure, Florence, Italy; David Rubin,
Curator of The Brown Foundation of Contemporary Art, San Antonio Museum of Art,
Texas, USA; Elza Ajzenberg, Professor of Art and Communication, Director of The Mac,
Museum of Contemporary Art, Sao Paolo, Brazil; R.B. Bhaskaran, Chairman of Lalit
Kala Akademi, National Academy of Art, India; Rosa Tejada, Educator Metropolitan
Museum New York, USA; Gregorio Luke, director of Molaa, Latin American art museum
Long Beach California, USA; Dominique Edouard Bacheler, art history teacher and art
critic, Paris, France; Pasquale Celona President of the Biennale and President of
the International Jury, Italy, Piero Celona, Vicepresident of the Biennale and
Public Relations Manager, Italy.
The Florence Biennale is organized by Arte Studio (www.florencebiennale.org).

Political ambassador and Artistic Director of the Parliament Museum in San Paolo,
Brazil Emmanuel von Lauenstein Massarani is the 2007 Biennale Director. Massarani
has replaced John T. Spike in the role, who determined the fundamental philosophy of
the Biennale, and in turn, its success.



Gilbert & George

In Carter Ratcliff's "Gilbert & George: The Complete Pictures 1971-1985", (London,
1986) Gilbert & George stated "We want Our Art to speak across the barriers of
knowledge directly to People about their life and not about their knowledge of
art... The content of mankind is our subject and our inspiration. We stand each day
for good traditions and necessary changes. We want to find and accept all the good
and bad in ourselves".

Gilbert & George met at St Martin's School of Art, London in 1967 and have been one
artist ever since exhibiting for the first time together in 1969 at the Nigel
Greenwood Gallery London, with "Singing Sculpture". They referred to themselves not
as performance artists but as "Living Sculptures" and their "responsibility suits",
the almost, ill-fitting sixties style suits which have become emblematic of part of
their image, were part of the "living sculpture" that they embodied.

In the 1970's Gilbert & George turned towards creating their own black and white
photographic images. They almost always depicted themselves in a grid format along
with aspects of the east end of London where they live: faces, buildings and
graffiti, "Smash the Reds", 1977 or "Bummed", 1977 where there is also a political
aspect and the important introduction of the colour red. In "Prick Ass", 1977 film
clips of a homeless alcoholic are inserted into the multi part image: this
interrelationship with people and architecture stress the images of anger,
loneliness and destruction and are further highlighted by this use of red.

In the 1980's where their subject matter expanded to include sex, religion, nature,
fear, racial differences and politics, their sumptuous works became brightly
multi-coloured. They once stated "when we are working we have our brain, our soul
and our sex. These are the things that we work with. Sometimes we do a picture more
for sex, sometimes more for our brain and sometimes more for our spirit. It's always
with a combination of those three that we work. The whole of civilisation continues
because of those driving forces". (Ratcliff, "Gilbert and George: The Complete
Pictures 1971-1985", London, 1986). Indeed, these photographic works continue to be
placed within a framed grid, which lends to convey the image more forcefully to the
viewer. The idea of natural division in the world is important to the artists who,
when talking about the grid aspect of their works, have given the examples of house
being made up of bricks or a week of days.

Gilbert & George represented Great Britain at the Biennale di Venezia in 2005 with a
new group of paintings, "Thirteen Hooligan Pictures" (2004) and Perversive Pictures
(2004). Indeed "Six Bomb Pictures: Terror" their most recent work from 2006
continues to affront current affairs and political issues.
Such is Gilbert & George's commitment to their art that they have continued to adopt
this persona of living art in their everyday lives: in their normal but formal way
of dressing, their name and address being in the phone book, they are thought to
have been seen on the London bus, in their measured formality, aspects that in
today's celebrities you rarely see.



For further information:
Press Office: Vito Abba
Studio Abba
Corso Italia, 6
50123 Florence
Italy
tel./fax + 39 055292082
press@florencebiennale.org
www.florencebiennale.org




Web Site = http://www.florencebiennale.org

Contact Details = Press Office: Vito Abba
Studio Abba
Corso Italia, 6
50123 Florence
Italy
tel./fax + 39 055292082
press@florencebiennale.org
www.florencebiennale.org

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