White Cube, Gilbert and George: The Beard Pictures and their Fuckosophy
Contemporary art duo Gilbert & George celebrate fifty years of working together with a new exhibition at White Cube Bermondsey
It’s often thought that the artists Gilbert & George are be-suited oddballs who can be dab-handily labelled ‘English eccentrics’. But that reading would be a severe understatement of their social and cultural impact over the last fifty years. For Gilbert & George have long been happy to lob visual and verbal grenades into the salons of polite opinion.
Ever since the 1970s, when they emerged from St Martin’s School of Art and set up home in the then decrepit area of Spitalfields, they have delighted in testing the art world's tolerance. In the 1980s they were subject to shrill accusations of being racist and fascist for using words including ‘Paki’, ‘wanker’ and ‘c*nt’ on their artworks.
Then came the ‘Naked Shit’ pictures in the 90s which included photographs of their faeces and a rallying cry of support for Brexit just last year. Looking at Gilbert & George’s work is like embarking on a genteel roller-coaster. They have survived all the brickbats with non-committal élan. They deservedly won the Turner Prize in 1984 and have recently been elected Royal Academicians. They are chroniclers, not moralists.
Gilbert & George, BEARDOUT, 2016, © Gilbert & George, Courtesy White Cube
Fifty years later they are still firmly together – Gilbert is 74 and George is 75 – and are still making some of the most provocative art the contemporary art world has witnessed in recent years. To celebrate half a century of working together the eccentric duo are exhibiting a new body of work at White Cube gallery in Bermondsey.
THE BEARD PICTURES depict the be-suited pair (digitally manipulated in bright colours) sporting surreal looking beards made out of an eccentric range of materials, you'll see everything from beer foam to snake tongues.
The British novelist Michael Bracewell, who has written the introductory essay to the upcoming exhibition catalogue, describes THE BEARD PICTURES as 'violent, eerie, grotesque, lurid and crazed. They show a dream-like world of paranoia and destruction and madness. Their strange sickly colours and creeping, smashed up, absurd landscapes confront the viewer with relentless aggression. THE BEARD PICTURES depict a world bereft of reason, in which negotiation no longer exists. [...] Secular and sacred, the throwback emblem of hip millennial youth as well as a mark of religious faith, the beard is depicted in THE BEARD PICTURES as both mask and meaning: a sign of the times.'
The BEARD PICTURES will be shown alongside THE FUCKOSOPHY, a collection of profanities written large on the white-washed walls of White Cube.
Absurd but intensely symbolic, it's Gilbert & George at their best.
Ever since the 1970s, when they emerged from St Martin’s School of Art and set up home in the then decrepit area of Spitalfields, they have delighted in testing the art world's tolerance. In the 1980s they were subject to shrill accusations of being racist and fascist for using words including ‘Paki’, ‘wanker’ and ‘c*nt’ on their artworks.
Then came the ‘Naked Shit’ pictures in the 90s which included photographs of their faeces and a rallying cry of support for Brexit just last year. Looking at Gilbert & George’s work is like embarking on a genteel roller-coaster. They have survived all the brickbats with non-committal élan. They deservedly won the Turner Prize in 1984 and have recently been elected Royal Academicians. They are chroniclers, not moralists.
Gilbert & George, BEARDOUT, 2016, © Gilbert & George, Courtesy White Cube
Fifty years later they are still firmly together – Gilbert is 74 and George is 75 – and are still making some of the most provocative art the contemporary art world has witnessed in recent years. To celebrate half a century of working together the eccentric duo are exhibiting a new body of work at White Cube gallery in Bermondsey.
THE BEARD PICTURES depict the be-suited pair (digitally manipulated in bright colours) sporting surreal looking beards made out of an eccentric range of materials, you'll see everything from beer foam to snake tongues.
The British novelist Michael Bracewell, who has written the introductory essay to the upcoming exhibition catalogue, describes THE BEARD PICTURES as 'violent, eerie, grotesque, lurid and crazed. They show a dream-like world of paranoia and destruction and madness. Their strange sickly colours and creeping, smashed up, absurd landscapes confront the viewer with relentless aggression. THE BEARD PICTURES depict a world bereft of reason, in which negotiation no longer exists. [...] Secular and sacred, the throwback emblem of hip millennial youth as well as a mark of religious faith, the beard is depicted in THE BEARD PICTURES as both mask and meaning: a sign of the times.'
The BEARD PICTURES will be shown alongside THE FUCKOSOPHY, a collection of profanities written large on the white-washed walls of White Cube.
Absurd but intensely symbolic, it's Gilbert & George at their best.
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What | White Cube, Gilbert and George: The Beard Pictures and their Fuckosophy |
Where | White Cube Bermondsey, 144-152 Bermondsey Street , London, SE1 3TQ | MAP |
Nearest tube | Bermondsey (underground) |
When |
22 Nov 17 – 28 Jan 18, 10:00 AM – 6:00 PM |
Price | £free |
Website | Please click here for more information |