Fine Art PR Publicity Announcements News and Information
Fine Art PR Publicity Announcements News and Information

Michael Landy: The new National Gallery Associate Artist

The National Gallery is delighted to announce that Michael Landy has agreed to become the next Rootstein Hopkins Foundation Associate Artist. Michael Landy will be the eighth Associate Artist to work at the National Gallery.

Michael LandyBorn in London in 1963, Landy studied at Goldsmiths College alongside Damien Hirst, Sarah Lucas and Tracey Emin. He is best known for his monumental Artangel commission, ‘Break Down’ (2001), in which he systematically destroyed all of his possessions in a former department store in London’s Oxford Street. In a similarly ambitious gesture, he reproduced his parents’ Essex house, to scale, in the Duveen Galleries of Tate Britain, as part of ‘Semi-Detached’ (2004).

His large projects are often punctuated by smaller, more intimate bodies of work – mostly groups of drawings and etchings – which also demonstrate the artist’s obsessive nature. One of Landy’s most recent projects has been a series of 70 intricate pencil portraits of friends, family and fellow artists. These were completed over several months, during which he drew every day, seven days a week, for eight hours a day. The works were first shown at Thomas Dane Gallery, London, and will be the subject of an exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery in the autumn of 2010.

In parallel, Landy has worked on another large group of works on paper, in which he has responded to ‘Homage to New York’ (1960) by Swiss artist Jean Tinguely (1925–1991). Tinguely’s influential ‘auto-destructive’ piece consisted of a huge sculpture which partially destroyed itself in the courtyard of the Museum of Modern Art, New York. Landy’s works are currently the subject of an exhibition at Tate Liverpool. An accompanying documentary, directed by the artist and supported by the Channel 4 BRITDOC Foundation, recorded the project.

Observational drawing has become an essential component of Landy’s artistic practice. In 2002 he produced a series of finely wrought etchings, entitled ‘Nourishment’, that represent common weeds found growing near his studio in East London. One critic wrote of these that “the view from a distance suggests Ruskin’s moral and ordered view of nature, while up close one’s nose is in uncomfortable proximity to a pavement or back lot in Bethnal Green.”

Landy plans to begin in the studio at the National Gallery in January 2010 and to start work by making closely observed drawings from selected paintings in the collection, with the hope of finding unexpected ways of connecting to the works.

Michael Landy’s works are held in numerous public collections including the Tate Collection; the Arts Council, England; and the Museum of Modern Art, New York.

Image: Michael Landy is to become the Gallery’s latest associate artist. © Michael Landy, courtesy of the Thomas Dane Gallery