Jonathan Monk
Life and career
Art practice
Monk questions the meaning of art using conceptualism in a way that Ken Johnson in The New York Times called "sweet, wry and poetic".[1] Monk's work frequently questions (if not outright undermines) the art world's conventional means of controlling contemporary art's distribution and value. One example was when he gave an artist's talk for the Dia Art Foundation in 2014 and arranged for every attendee to receive a free Jonathan Monk collage, each of which had been placed on the venue's seating beforehand.[2] Another example is the series Receipt Drawings in which he goes out to dinner and makes an original drawing on the receipt, which he then sells to the first bidder on his Instagram account for the price of the meal.[3]
In an interview with David Shrigley, Monk says: "Is it or is it not or can it or can it not be? This is something that has been dealt with within the art world for some time and I guess the unanswerable question keeps us all going..."[4]
Art works
2010
"Diecimila" - Facsimile produced and published by mfc-michèle didier, Brussels
2007
"Deadman", selected for the Renaissance Society's 2007 group show, "Meanwhile, In Baghdad..."[5]
References
- Johnson, Ken (18 January 2002). "ART IN REVIEW; Jonathan Monk -- 'Free Lane'". New York Times. Retrieved 5 December 2013.
- "Watch & Listen | Dia".
- "Jonathan Monk - Antipasti".
- David, Shrigley. "Why are we Artists?". Archived from the original on 19 October 2006. Retrieved 5 December 2013.
- "Meanwhile, In Baghdad..." at the Renaissance Society Archived 2011-07-20 at the Wayback Machine
External sources
Lisson Gallery
Dvir Gallery
Frieze Magazine
New York Times Review
Casey Kaplan Gallery