• Source: Simon Patterson (artist)
    • Simon Patterson (born 1967) is an English artist and was born in Leatherhead, Surrey. He was shortlisted for the Turner Prize in 1996 for his exhibitions at the Lisson Gallery, the Gandy Gallery, and three shows in Japan. He is the younger brother of the painter Richard Patterson.


      Life and career


      Patterson attended Hertfordshire College of Art and Design and Goldsmiths College between 1985 and 1989. At Goldsmiths he was included in the Freeze Exhibition organized by Damien Hirst, showing two wall text pieces, one simply showing the names Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor, the other, The Last Supper Arranged According to the Flat Back Four Formation (Jesus Christ in Goal) showing the names of the Apostles arranged as different football team systems with Jesus in goal.
      Patterson is perhaps best known for his work The Great Bear from 1992, an editioned print that reworks the London Underground map. Patterson is taking an order system that exists within the world and applies it to another set of subjects. In this case, he switched the names from the stations with names from famous people. Each Line is a different group of people, like actors, philosophers, footballers etc. An edition was purchased by Charles Saatchi and was shown in the Sensation exhibition of 1997, which toured London, Berlin and New York. An edition is in the Tate Gallery collection and is currently on display at Tate Britain in London.
      Patterson has also created large-scale projects such as Cosmic Wallpaper at the University of Warwick, a Wilfred Owen tribute (Maison Forestière), and he also participated in the MoMA's The Project Series, 70, Banners I. The project's goal for each Simon, Shirin Neshat and Xu Bing was to test the ramifications of the written word in their own unique perspective to be displayed at the Museum’s Fifty-third Street facade flanked by banners bearing MoMA's logo from 22 November 1999 to 1 May 2000.
      Simon Patterson was a staff member at the Slade School of Fine Art.


      References




      External links


      Contemporary Art Society, Annual Report 2001/2002
      Contemporary Art Society, Annual Report 1999/2000
      Christie's, Auction Results for Simon Patterson
      Artnet, Biography and Selected Exhibitions
      Simon Patterson interviewed by Robert Dingle, 2009–10
      Tate, Intermedia Art - Le Match des Colors - Simon Patterson
      Artconnexion.org - La Maison Forestière Wilfred Owen - Simon Patterson
      The Oxford Times - A room of one's Owen - Simon Patterson
      Aajpress.wordpress.com - Simon Patterson: La Maison Forestière. Dedicated to the British poet Wilfred Owen, 2011
      La Maison Forestière by Simon Patterson
      Artnews.org
      Locus+
      Benrimon Contemporary - New York, USA
      Simon Patterson - Catalog for Anthology Exhibition, 2010
      Haunch of Venison - London, United Kingdom


      = Video

      =
      BBC News Magazine - Wilfred Owen: From humble cottage to dazzling tribute
      BBC Collective - Simon Patterson video interview
      Haunch of Venison - Simon Patterson video interview for Under Cartel Exhibition


      = Books

      =
      Eye on Europe, Museum of Modern Art, ISBN 0870703714
      Paint Ten Rooms, Locus and International Design Publishing - ISBN 0955482542
      Domini Canes: The Hounds of God - Publisher: Axis Projects - ISBN 0955482542
      Paper Democracy: Contemporary Art in Editions on Paper - Publisher: Associacao Cultura Inglesa de Sao Paulo - ISBN 8598735019
      Simon Patterson - Publisher: Locus+ - ISBN 1899377166
      Plantation Lane: Time and Tide, RIBA Publishing - ISBN 1859461735
      Republicans, Third Eye Centre - ISBN 0906474825
      High Noon, Edinburgh - ISBN 0947912886
      Simon Patterson: Black-list - Publisher: Haunch of Venison, c2006 - ISBN 190562008X
      Rex Reason, Book Works - ISBN 1870699130
      Offside! Contemporary Artists & Football, Institute of International Visual Arts (INIVA) - ISBN 0901673501

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