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   » » Wiki: Jeremy Deller
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Jeremy Deller (born 30 March 1966) is an conceptual, video and installation artist. Much of Deller's work is ; it has a strong political aspect, in the subjects dealt with and also the devaluation of artistic ego through the involvement of other people in the creative process. He won the in 2004 and represented Great Britain at the 55th in 2013. Jeremy Deller wins 2004 Turner prize , 6 December 2004.


Early life and education
Jeremy Deller was born in and educated at St John's and St Clement's Primary School and the private school before studying for his BA History of Art at Courtauld Institute of Art (University of London); he achieved his MA in at the University of Sussex under David Alan Mellor.Chris Arnot, " David Alan Mellor: Image Maker", The Guardian, 1 March 2005. Accessed 22 October 2010.


Work
Deller traces his broad interests in art and culture, in part, to childhood visits to museums like the , in . After meeting in 1986, Deller spent two weeks at in New York. He began making artworks in the early 1990s, often showing them outside of conventional galleries. In 1993, while his parents were on holiday (he was 27, still living at home),Charlotte Higgins (6 December 2011), Jeremy Deller, Turner prizewinner, to have Hayward Gallery retrospective  . he secretly used the family home for an exhibition titled Open Bedroom. Jeremy Deller: Joy in People, 22 February – 13 May 2012 , London.

In 1997, Deller embarked on , a musical collaboration with the Williams Fairey Brass Band from . The project was based on fusing the music of a traditional brass band with and .

Much of Deller's work is collaborative. His work has a strong political aspect, in the subjects dealt with and also the devaluation of artistic ego through the involvement of other people in the creative process. Folk Archive is a tour of "people's art" and has been exhibited throughout the UK including at and most recently (2013) at The Public, West Bromwich, outside of the contemporary art institution. Much of his work is ephemeral in nature and avoids commodification.

Deller staged The Battle of Orgreave in 2001, bringing together almost 1,000 people in a public re-enactment of a violent confrontation from the 1984 Miners' Strike. The re-enactment was filmed by director for Media and Channel 4. The Battle of Orgreave was ranked second in 's Best Art of the 21st Century list, with critic calling it a "monument of sorts, the performance was at once participatory ritual, spectacle, living archive and a space to mourn". In 2004, for the opening of 5, the roving European Biennial of Contemporary art, Deller organised a Social Parade through the streets of the city of Donostia-San Sebastian, drafting in cadres of local alternative societies and support groups to participate.

In 2005/6, he was involved in a touring exhibit of contemporary British folk art, in collaboration with Alan Kane. In late 2006, he instigated The Bat House Project, an architectural competition open to the public for a bat house on the outskirts of London.

The following year, 'Our Hobby is Depeche Mode', a documentary co-directed with Nick Abrahams about fans around the world was premiered at the London Film Festival, and followed by festival screenings around the world.

In 2009, Deller created Procession, a free and uniquely Mancunian parade through the centre of along , a co-commission by Manchester International Festival and . Procession worked with diverse groups of people drawn from the 10 boroughs of Greater Manchester and took place on Sunday 5 July at 1400 hrs.

Commissioned in 2009 as part of The Three M Project (a group composed of the , New York; the , LA; and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, to exhibit and commission new works of art), Deller created It Is What It Is. The project was designed to foster public discussion by having guest experts engage museum visitors in a free-form, unscripted dialogue about issues concerning Iraq.

In 2015 the exhibition The Infinitely Variable Ideal of the Popular was presented at MUAC in , curated by , Amanda de la Garza and Cuauhtémoc Medina. The exhibition traveled to Fundación Proa in and in .

Sacrilege, a 1:1 bouncy replica of created for the 2012 Olympic Games, was toured around the UK and eventually to Móstoles, Community of Madrid, in 2015. Charlotte Higgins, of , noted that a megalithic bouncy by artist had toured Ireland a few years previously, and wrote: "Why, after several millennia of human creativity, have two inflatable megalithic monuments come along at once?" Despite claims of plagiarism, the two works were shown together in in the summer of 2012.

On 1 July 2016, his We're Here Because We're Here, commemorating the 100th anniversary of the Battle of the Somme, took place in public spaces across the United Kingdom. On 29 June 2017, his event "What Is The City But The People?" opened the Manchester International Festival.

In 2019 the Jewish Museum London commissioned Deller to create a short film of antisemitic footage showing contemporary media, politicians, and propagandists making antisemitic statements for its special exhibit Jews, Money, Myth. Douglas Murray called the film's use of clips of U.S. President criticizing 'elites' for draining power from America "an unfair overclaim."

Deller produced the documentary Everybody in The Place: An Incomplete History of Britain 1984–1992 Https://www.imdb.com/title/tt10370776/< /ref> which covered acid house and rave culture, and political turmoil in Britain in the 1980s and early-1990s, first shown by on 2 August 2019.Mugs, Joe. ” Jeremy Deller on raving: 'Stormzy and Dave give me hope'”. The Guardian, 9 August 2019

Later the same year, Deller was forced to admit that his design for the memorial to the Peterloo Massacre, intended to provide a podium for speakers and a monument to equality campaigners, had completely failed to make any provision for wheelchair users, despite corporate artwork prominently featuring wheelchair users and even though access had been raised during the consultation process. Protests by disabled groups led to a last minute redesign and Deller describing himself as "chastened".

In June 2024, Deller brought Acid Brass to the streets of Retrieved 2024-06-15.


Other roles
In 2007, Deller was appointed a Trustee of the . "Jeremy Deller Appointed Tate Trustee", , 10 January 2007. Retrieved 27 March 2008.
(2009). 9780393337129
Between 2012 and 2013, he served on the board of trustees of the .Martin Bailey (30 September 2013), Art collection at stake in row between museum and charity The Art Newspaper.

In December 2020 Deller was part of the winning team from the Courtauld Institute of Art in Christmas University Challenge.


Awards and recognition
Deller was the winner of the in 2004. His show at included documentation on Battle of Orgreave and an installation Memory Bucket (2003), a documentary about Crawford, Texas—the hometown of George W. Bush—and the siege in nearby Waco.

In 2010, he was awarded the Albert Medal of the Royal Society for the encouragement of Arts, Manufactures & Commerce (RSA) for 'creating art that encourages public responses and creativity'.

The Battle of Orgreave ranked second in 's list of the best art of the 21st century, and 14th in Frieze's "25 Best Works of the 21st Century".


Political views
On 1 October 2010, in an open letter to the British Government's culture secretary , co-signed by 28 former Turner Prize nominees, and 18 winners, Deller opposed any future cuts in public funding for the arts. In the letter the co-signatories described the arts in Britain as a "remarkable and fertile landscape of culture and creativity".Peter Walker, " Turner prize winners lead protest against arts cutbacks," , 1 October 2010.

In August 2014, Deller was one of 200 public figures who were signatories to a letter to opposing Scottish independence in the run-up to September's referendum on that issue.

During the 2017 general election campaign he created a poster bearing the words "Strong and stable my arse", referring to 's election slogan, copies of which were publicly posted around London.


Exhibitions

Solo exhibitions
  • Unconvention, Centre for Visual Arts, Cardiff, 1999
  • After the Goldrush, Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts, San Francisco, 2002
  • Folk Archive: contemporary popular art from the UK with Alan Kane, , Paris and Barbican Art Gallery, London, 2005
  • Jeremy Deller, Kunstverein, Munich, 2005
  • From One Revolution to Another, Palais de Tokyo, Paris, 2008
  • It Is What It Is: Conversations About Iraq, and New Museum, New York, , Los Angeles, and Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, 2009
  • Procession, Cornerhouse, Manchester, 2009
  • Joy in People, a retrospective, , London, February–May 2012.
  • Art is Magic, a retrospective, Rennes Museum of Fine Arts, Rennes; La Criée contemporary art center; Frac Bretagne Fonds régional d'art contemporain, France, 2023


Other exhibitions
  • EASTinternational, selected by Marian Goodman and , 1995
  • EASTinternational, 2006 with Dirk Snauwaert

Deller was selected to represent Great Britain at the in 2013.


See also


Notes and references

External links

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