
Simryn Gill
Untitled (detail: The Asian Highway: A complete Overland Guide from Australia to Europe, Angus and Robertson, Sydney, 1979) 2006 © The artist. Photo: Jenni Carter
Simryn Gill, Installation View, © Tate 2006
|
Free Entry
Gill’s work questions the coherence of systems that humans create to ‘know’ the world around them. Working with a myriad of materials, including books, plant materials, photographs and other found objects, she encourages the viewer to reject a rigid classification of their surroundings in favour of arrangements which offer uncertainty, disturbance and new possibilities.
For the Level 2 Gallery, Gill has created a thought-provoking installation from a collection of books assembled over many years. Ranging from pulp fiction to academic writings, these publications provide the raw material which Gill then uses to tease out a supposedly ‘neutral’ set of words.
Simryn Gill was born in Singapore in 1959. She now lives in Sydney,
Australia and works from Australia and Malaysia.
The exhibition Simryn Gill at Tate Modern, fourth in a series conceived by
Jessica Morgan, Curator, Contemporary Art, Tate Modern, is curated by
Juliet Bingham, Assistant Curator.
Simryn Gill would like to thank her assistants Caleb Goman, Lucas George
and Chris Colla for their help with this project.