Friday 24 May 2013

Margaret Harrison wins Northern Art Prize

Harrison pegged children's clothing, toys and photographs to a replica fence

Margaret Harrison, 72, who lives in Carlisle, has been named winner of the Northern Art Prize in Leeds.

She was the oldest nominee in the prize's seven-year history.

The judges included Turner Prize-winning painter Tomma Abts and Frieze magazine co-editor Jennifer Higgie.

They said they chose Harrison for her "vital new work that reflects on her 50-year career at the front line of art and activism".

Harrison is one of the UK's leading feminist artists, whose debut London exhibition in 1971 was closed down by police because it was deemed indecent.

It included a painting of Playboy founder Hugh Hefner squeezed into a bunny girl costume and a kinky Captain America complete with fake breasts, suspenders and a stars and stripes bodice.

She has won the Northern Art Prize for her new exhibition titled Reflect, which features painting and drawing, as well as the Greenham Common installation.

The women of Greenham Common camped outside the US Air Force base in Berkshire for 19 years from 1981, to protest against the deployment of nuclear missiles.

Harrison visited the camp visited several times in the 1980s and her artwork features items including children's clothing, toys, photographs and kitchen utensils pegged to a replica fence.

She recently told the Yorkshire Evening Post: "The fence itself was almost a piece of artwork, like a canvas, which people used to hang banners and paintings on and weave things into.

"And I wanted to create a diary of images from the fence that were both personal and political."

Despite winning the Northern Art Prize, which is open to contemporary artists working in the north of England, she would not be eligible for the Turner Prize which has an age limit of 50.

The Wakefield-born artist said she was delighted to be nominated for the Northern Art Prize because "it's the only prize that isn't ageist and it's in Yorkshire".

The other nominated artists were Rosalind Nashashibi, Emily Speed and the duo Joanne Tatham and Tom O'Sullivan.

Source: BBC

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