August 27, 2004 at 12:10 pm
By: steve rowell - 28th August 2004 at 04:47
I’m to scared to put out my rubbish tin these days incase there’s any art thieves around
LONDON: A bag of rubbish was thrown away at London’s Tate gallery after a cleaner assumed it was just that — a bag of rubbish.
But organisers of the Art and the Sixties exhibition confirmed yesterday that the bin-liner filled with newspaper, cardboard and other bits of discarded paper was actually a work of art by the German-born artist Gustav Metzger.
They conceded the contents were not in any way manipulated together other than being in the bag.
A Tate insider said: “A cleaner doing her rounds saw the bag of rubbish on the floor and threw it out with the rest of the trash. It wasn’t roped off. How was she to know what it was supposed to be?”
The bag was retrieved from the skip it had been tossed in, but the 78-year-old artist is believed to have declared it too badly damaged to be returned to the gallery. He replaced it with a new bag.
A Tate spokesman said Metzger had not had to pick up new rubbish to put in the replacement bag but had simply found one that was discarded and used it.
“He doesn’t manipulate what’s in the bag,” the spokesman said.
Asked how the Tate would ensure that no one else confuses a work of art with rubbish, the spokesman said: “We have briefed all staff about this. It’s now covered over at night so it can’t be removed.”
The bag is part of an artwork titled Recreation of the First Public Demonstration of Auto Destructive Art, a copy of a work Metzger produced in 1960. It also features an acid painting in which acid has been painted on to nylon to destroy it — a reflection of the artist’s view of paintings, sculptures and constructions having a finite existence, after which they will be destroyed.
Works by David Hockney and Peter Blake are also displayed in Art and the Sixties, which explores art after 1956, a period of seismic change in British culture.
This is not the first time contemporary art has run into trouble. Three years ago a Damien Hirst work was thrown away because a cleaner thought it was rubbish. The work — bottles, cigarette boxes, full ashtrays and paint tins — was intended to reflect the chaos of an artist’s studio. The work was retrieved from a bin bag and reassembled.
By: Arthur - 27th August 2004 at 17:24
Ah well, this only makes it official.
I’ve been Art all my life.
By: DazDaMan - 27th August 2004 at 14:30
I do! So :p
By: EN830 - 27th August 2004 at 13:54
Sorry none of you are pretentious enough to be an artist of the same calibre as me. You donβt see the colour, the depth, the meaning, the lack of noodles.
By: Arshad - 27th August 2004 at 13:49
damn my whole house is a big masterpiece.
By: Arthur - 27th August 2004 at 13:43
Now i know where my artistic genius lays!
By: EN830 - 27th August 2004 at 13:05
0207 887 8000
By: Arabella-Cox - 27th August 2004 at 12:56
What a fabulous juxtapositioning of the chaos of modern life, with the sense of diminishing time, increasing stress, and the fact that you’re a lazy sod who can’t arsed to stick it in a bin.
Must be worth 150 grand, that. Got the number for the Tate? π
By: EN830 - 27th August 2004 at 12:51
Desk by en830
I’m an artist and I never even knew.
My latest creation:- Desk.
It’s an indictment of the work I have to do today, and the short time that I have to eat lunch
Oh by the way it was Red Thai Chicken today
By: DazDaMan - 27th August 2004 at 12:32
Maybe I should put my bedroom in an art gallery – it’s a tip! π
I can see the title card now: “The chaos of the mid-20s man”…. π
By: steve rowell - 27th August 2004 at 12:26
If that’s art, well i’m speechless
By: EN830 - 27th August 2004 at 12:24
I didn’t see a case, just a load of rubbish π
By: snakeman - 27th August 2004 at 12:23
π What do you think of it so far……. π