British Council Collection
STILL LIFE 1978
Tim Head (1946 – )
Details
- Dimension
- 250 X 300 CM
- Media
- MIXED MEDIA AND SLIDE PROJECTION INSTALLATION
- Accession number
- P3699
Summary
In a career that has spanned over thirty years, Tim Head has created works in such a variety of media that it is difficult to identify a single characteristic. From early installations in which he layered projected images of objects over the real things, to his current explorations in digital media, it would be possible to describe Head’s chameleon-like transformations as mirroring the changing nature of technology ? and ecology. But this would be to overlook his experimentation in paint¬ing in the early 1990s, just at a time when many were pronouncing the medium’s demise. Head is constantly questioning perceptions of the truth. He is concerned with optical phenomena, challenging us to make sense of a world in which there is, arguably, no meaning beyond the sur¬face tension – just a collection of light and shadows. From layering slide projections on top of one another to repeating and reducing familiar motifs, Head manipulates our reading of an object or image. There are also environmental concerns at play. In the early 1980s, he commented on excessive consumption in a series of lurid photographs featuring hundreds of tiny plastic toys and a rich, candy-coloured material float¬ing like scum on a toxic sea. He painted familiar consumer motifs, too, such as the Happy Eater logo, which he repeated and manipulated as a means of exploring ideas of genetic mutation.
Head studied under the visionary Pop artist Richard Hamilton at Newcastle University in the mid 1960s. By the end of the decade he was living in New York and working as an assistant to the sculptor Claes Oldenburg, famed for his enormous public sculptures of every¬day objects (lipsticks, hamburgers), often made of soft or floppy fabric which innately mocked the very idea of the noble and immutable public monument. Returning to London in the 1970s, Head began teaching at Goldsmiths College. In 1977, he became artist in residence at Clare Hall in Cambridge, and it was here, the following year, that he madeStill Life. The installation consists of a photograph of a brick wall against which a variety of objects have been placed, including a chair on which a naked woman sits. The image is then turned upside down and re-projected in negative onto the same wall. The result is an uncanny layer¬ing of imagery that leaves the viewer completely disorientated. Reality is made indistinguishable from fiction.
JL
Published in Passports British Council Collection, British Council, London 2009
Glossary
-
Installation
An artwork comprised of many and various elements of miscellaneous materials (see mixed media), light and sound, which is conceived for and occupies an entire space, gallery or site. The viewer can often enter or walk around the installation. Installations may only exist as long as they are installed, but can be re-created in different sites. Installation art emerged in the 1960s out of Environmental Art (works of art which are three-dimensional environments), but it was not until the 1970s that the term came into common use and not until the late 1980s that artists started to specialise in this kind of work, creating a genre of ‘Installation Art’. The term can also be applied to the arrangement of selected art works in an exhibition.
-
Negative
An image in which colours and shades of an inage are reversed: the light areas of the object appear dark and the dark areas appear light. Also refers to a film, plate, or other photographic material containing such an image.
-
Photograph
A permanent image taken by means of the chemical action of light on light-sensitive surfaces.
-
Slide
An image on a transparent film / transparency, usually photographic, mounted in a frame. Viewed with a slide projector or projected onto a screen.