Showing all 12 results

  • Douglas Gordon (Tate Modern Artist Series)

    R150

    ‘I provide the board, the pieces and the dice, but you are the ones that have to play’-Douglas Gordon
    Over the past decade Douglas Gordon has received recognition as one of the most exciting and challenging British artist working today. His deployment of

  • Tate Modern Artists Series: Ed Ruscha

    R200

    The American Artist Ed Ruscha (b. 1937) has worked in a variety of media including painting, printmaking, drawing, photography, books and film, to produce art that is at once playful and profound. Based in Los Angeles since the late 1950s, he was influential in the development of Pop Art on the west coast, particularly through…

  • Gabriel Orozco (Tate Modern Artist Series)

    R150

    Gabriel Orozco, born in Mexico, in 1962, is one of the most influential artists of his generation. Dividing his time between Mexico City, Paris and New York, his constant travelling has been as much a part of his artistic practice as a lifestyle. His works, often playful and characterised by an ironic humour, range from…

  • Jeff Wall (Tate Modern Artist Series)

    R150

    “Every subject is a reason to make a picture.”

  • Julian Opie- Tate Modern Artists

    More than any British artist of his generation, Julian Opie has taken his art beyond the gallery environment and out into the mainstream of cultural life, testing his ideas in a wide variety of media. Author Mary Horlock surveys his career, beginning with the early painted metal sculptures of everyday objects, encompassing the 3-D evocations of the urban landscape, and finishing with the powerful graphic style evolved in recent years that has transferred to billboard posters, road signs, LED screens and album covers.

  • Mark Wallinger (Tate Modern Artist Series)

    R150

    Mark Wallinger has created some of the most subtly intelligent and irreverent artworks of the last twenty-five years. While his early focus was on the traditions and values of British society, in the 1990’s his interests shifted to a questioning of power structures more widely, and the playful exploration of subjects as diverse as horse…

  • Peter Blake (Tate Modern Artist Series)

    R150

    ‘I am a tree, so to speak. The trunk is fairly straight and traditional. Where my art has left to go on different excursions there are branches like Pop Art, wood engraving and Ruralism… What I am working on now is in direct line with what preoccupied me years ago; the same fantasies.’-Peter Blake
    Peter Blake is one of the most influential and original artists

  • Richard Wilson (Tate Modern Artist Series)

    R200

    Born in London in 1953 to a family of builders and artists, Richard Wilson creates works that often come closer to engineering or even architecture than to traditional sculpture. Typically he transforms the viewer’s environment into something unsettling and strange through interventions that not only alter the physical space but also interfere with our perception of it.

  • Richard Wilson – Tate Modern Artist Series

    R150

    The work of Richard Wilson (b.1953) often comes closer to engineering or even architecture than it does to traditional sculpture. Typically he transforms the viewer’s environment into something unsettling and strange by the interventions he makes, whether in the internal space of a gallery, the structure of a building or in one of the ships with which he has a particular affinity.
    Perhaps Wilson’s best-known work is 20:50 for which he flooded a gallery space with

  • Sarah Lucas (Tate Modern Artist Series)

    R150

    During a career that has brought her controversy and acclaim in equal measure, Sarah Lucas has made art from the discarded and unexpected, incorporating such diverse materials as cigarettes, food, second-hand furniture and

  • William Kentridge – Tate Modern Artist Series

    R700

    “It’s not a mistake to see a shape in the cloud. That’s what it is to be alive with your eyes open; to be constantly, promiscuously, putting things together”. – William Kentridge.

  • William Kentridge – Tate Modern Artist Series (Signed)

    R1000

    “It’s not a mistake to see a shape in the cloud. That’s what it is to be alive with your eyes open; to be constantly, promiscuously, putting things together”. – William Kentridge.