- Source: Brian Catling
Brian Catling (23 October 1948 – 26 September 2022) was a British sculptor, poet, novelist, film maker and performance artist. He was educated at North East London Polytechnic and the Royal College of Art. He held the post of Professor of Fine Art at the Ruskin School of Drawing and Fine Art in Oxford and was a fellow of Linacre College. He exhibited his work internationally since the 1970s. Some of his most notable works and performances included: Quill Two at Matt's Gallery, Dilston Grove in 2011, Antix at Matt's Gallery in 2006, a commissioned memorial to the Site of Execution, Tower of London in 2006, Vanished! A Video Seance made with screenwriter Tony Grisoni in 1999 and Cyclops at South London Gallery 1996.
In 2001 he co-founded the international performance collective WitW.
As a writer he published poetic works, including one compendium, A Court of Miracles, in 2009. His first prose book Bobby Awl was published in 2007. He completed The Vorrh trilogy of novels in 2018.
In 2019 Company Carpi, the partnership of choreographer Bettina Carpi and composer Gary Lloyd, based their hybrid dance piece The Stumbling Block on the poetry cycle by Catling, which includes sections of the cycle recorded with Catling himself at his home in Wytham, Oxford. Catling was the subject of a BBC Arena programme about his life and work, entitled Where Does it All Come From?, which aired in November 2021.
Catling died from small cell neuroendocrine carcinoma, a rare form of cancer, on 26 September 2022, at the age of 73. He was survived by his fourth wife, Caroline Ullman, and his children.
The Vorrh
The first title of The Vorrh trilogy was published in 2012 and features a foreword by acclaimed writer Alan Moore. Taking inspiration from the imaginary forest of the same name in Raymond Roussel's Impressions of Africa, the Vorrh is the backdrop to an epic fantasy/surrealist narrative led by hunter Tsungali and the Cyclops, Ishmael. Also appearing in The Vorrh are real-life figures Eadweard Muybridge and Raymond Roussel.
The Vorrh (2012)
The Erstwhile (2017)
The Cloven (2018)
Solo exhibitions
2011 Quill Two Matt's Gallery at Dilston Grove
2010 Bluecoat Gallery Liverpool bienalle
2008 Ingleby Gallery, Edinburgh. Scotland
2006 Antix. Matt's Gallery. London. 16 night Performance installation
2002 Antic (Norwegian version) Video installation. Trans-Art Gallery Trondheim. Norway
2002 Buhl Cyclops. Video installation. AKW. Stadt Buhl. Germany
2000 Man in the Moon. Galleri e.s. Bergen
1999 Were : The Chamber works, ICA, London
1998 Were, durational performance, Matt's Gallery, London
1997 Cyclops (video installation in German language), Project Gallery, Leipzig
1997 Country of the Blind, text, drawings & video, The Economist, London
1997 Nordic Cyclops (video installation), Museet for Samtidskunst, Oslo
1996 Cyclops (video installation), South London Gallery
1995 Cyclops, Galerie Satellite, Paris
1994 The Blindings, Serpentine Gallery, London
1993 Ten Gallery, Fukuoka, Japan
1993 La Bas, Galerie Satellite, Paris
1991 At The Lighthouse, Matt's Gallery, London
1989 Museum of Modern Art, Oxford
1988 Atrium, Neuw Gallery, Sammalung Ludwig, Aachen, Germany
1987 White Breath / Red Heart, Hordaland Kunstnercentrum, Bergen, Norway
1987 Lair, Matt's Gallery, London
1986 On Touching And Haunting A Noble Silent Room, Leifsgade 22, Copenhagen
Publications
References
External links
Official website (no longer hosted at this domain name)
Official website of WitW
1 artwork by or after Brian Catling at the Art UK site
Interview with Brian Catling
Profile on Royal Academy of Arts Collections
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Brian Catling
- Earwig (film)
- Catling
- The Vorrh
- Iain Sinclair
- Conductors of Chaos: A Poetry Anthology
- The Hunt in the Forest
- The New British Poetry
- Anthology of Twentieth-Century British and Irish Poetry
- Tower of London