TURNER PRIZE
Established in 1984, the prize is named after the radical British painter JMW Turner (1775-1851). Originating at Tate Britain, the Turner Prize regularly travels to other venues in the UK. In 2023 it will be held at Towner Eastbourne, and in 2024 will return to Tate Britain. The members of the Turner Prize 2023 jury will be Martin Clark, Director, Camden Art Centre; Cédric Fauq, Chief Curator, Capc musée d’art contemporain de Bordeaux; Melanie Keen, Director of Wellcome Collection and Helen Nisbet, Artistic Director, Art Night.
Previous Turner Prize winners are: 1984 Malcolm Morley; 1985 Howard Hodgkin; 1986 Gilbert & George; 1987 Richard Deacon; 1988 Tony Cragg; 1989 Richard Long; 1991 Anish Kapoor; 1992 Grenville Davey; 1993 Rachel Whiteread; 1994 Antony Gormley; 1995 Damien Hirst; 1996 Douglas Gordon; 1997 Gillian Wearing; 1998 Chris Ofili; 1999 Steve McQueen; 2000 Wolfgang Tillmans; 2001 Martin Creed; 2002 Keith Tyson; 2003 Grayson Perry; 2004 Jeremy Deller; 2005 Simon Starling; 2006 Tomma Abts; 2007 Mark Wallinger; 2008 Mark Leckey; 2009 Richard Wright; 2010 Susan Philipsz; 2011 Martin Boyce; 2012 Elizabeth Price; 2013 Laure Prouvost; 2014 Duncan Campbell; 2015 Assemble; 2016 Helen Marten; 2017 Lubaina Himid; 2018 Charlotte Prodger; 2019 Hamdan/Cammock/Murillo/Shani; 2021 Array Collective.
ABOUT VERONICA RYAN
Veronica Ryan was born in Plymouth, Montserrat in 1956. Ryan studied at The School of Oriental and African Studies, London, UK in 1983; The Slade School of Fine Art, University College, London, UK in 1980; Bath Academy of Art, Corsham Court, UK in 1978; and St. Albans College of Art and Design, UK in 1975. In 2021 Ryan received an OBE in the Queen’s Birthday Honours List.
Recent solo exhibitions include: Along a Spectrum, Spike Island, Bristol (2021); The Weather Inside, Paula Cooper Gallery, New York, USA (2019); Veronica Ryan: Salvage, The Art House, Wakefield, Yorkshire (2017); The Hepworth Museum, Wakefield, Yorkshire (2017); The Weather Inside, The Mattress Factory, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA (2011); Archaeology of the Black Sun: Musings After Kristeva, Salena Gallery, Long Island University, New York, USA (2005); Quoit Montserrat, Tate St Ives, Cornwall (2000); Compartments/Apartments, Angel Row, Nottingham, and Camden Arts Centre, London (1995). In 2021, Ryan was commissioned by Hackney Council to create the first permanent artwork to honour the Windrush generation in the UK.
Group exhibitions include: Quiet as It’s Kept, Whitney Biennial 2022, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, USA (2022); Portable Sculpture, Henry Moore Institute, Leeds, UK (2021), No Particular Place to Go?, Castlefield Gallery, Manchester (2019); The Place Is Here, Nottingham Contemporary, Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art and South London Gallery (2017); Infinite Islands, The Brooklyn Museum, New York, USA (2007).
Ryan’s practice addresses issues of history, belonging, and human psychology, using a wide range of materials, including bronze, plaster, marble, textile, and found objects. Rejecting a straightforward narrative, Ryan uncovers psychological associations using containers, compartments and negative and positive space as metaphors for displacement, fragmentation and alienation, while also referencing the natural world. Ryan’s sculptures adopt organic shapes, yet resist a definitive interpretation of these forms, enabling multiple narratives to emerge. Themes such as the historical networks of intergenerational and commercial exchange, alongside the cycles of death and rebirth, environmental breakdown, and collective trauma, all inhabit her unique sculptural practice.
Made during an extended residency at Spike Island in Bristol, the works in Along a Spectrum make enquiries into perception and spectrums of pathologies, personal narratives, history, as well as the wider psychological implications of the Covid pandemic. Works produced for the exhibition included forms cast in clay and bronze; sewn, tea-stained and dyed fabrics; and bright neon crocheted fishing line pouches filled with a variety of seeds, fruit stones and skins.
Ryan is 66 and lives between New York and Bristol.
BNP Paribas
BNP Paribas has been present in the UK for more than 150 years, serving the UK economy and seeking to make a positive impact on society. A committed advocate of culture in the UK, it has supported major exhibitions at the Royal Academy of Arts for over 20 years; commenced a partnership with Tate to support The Turner Prize and has been an official partner of British Tennis since 2009. BNP Paribas UK employs more than 8,500 people across 27 locations in the UK where it operates 9 businesses: Arval, Asset Management, Commercial Finance, Corporate and Institutional Banking including Securities Services, Leasing Solutions, Personal Finance and Real Estate.
BNP Paribas has proudly supported the Turner Prize since 2018.
Taylor Wessing
Taylor Wessing is a global law firm that serves the world’s most innovative people and businesses. Deeply embedded within their sectors, they work closely together with their clients to crack complex problems, enabling ideas and aspirations to thrive. Creative thinking is at the heart of their culture and they see art as an important instrument of change. Together with their people and community partners, they seek to challenge expectation and create extraordinary results. Taylor Wessing is very proud to support the Turner Prize 2022, showcasing some of the most thought-provoking artists of our time in an immersive environment for audiences.
Avanti West Coast
Avanti West Coast, operator of intercity rail services on the West Coast Main Line, is a joint venture between FirstGroup and Trenitalia, delivering a cleaner, greener railway that drives the West Coast forward. Avanti West Coast are proud to support this year’s Turner Prize at Tate Liverpool.
With hourly services between London and Liverpool, Merseyside is within easy reach of the capital with a journey time of just over two hours.
They also have exciting plans to introduce a new fleet of intercity trains, as well as the complete refurbishment of the existing Pendolino train fleet. For more information please visit www.avantiwestcoast.co.uk
Liverpool City Region Combined Authority
Led by Metro Mayor Steve Rotheram, and working for its 1.6m residents, LCRCA is made up of six local authorities - Halton, Knowsley, Liverpool, Sefton, St Helens and Wirral – and is working to deliver its vision to create a fairer, stronger, cleaner city region, where no-one is left behind.
It uses its devolved powers in areas that have a real impact, such as transport, employment, digital, housing and culture. It is the first Combined Authority to have control over culture through devolution and is committed to stimulating cultural and creative opportunities to make a meaningful difference to people living and working in the area