The Conspiracy of Blindness

The Conspiracy of Blindness

12 Brook's Mews London, W1K 4DG, United Kingdom Friday, March 15, 2024–Friday, May 10, 2024 Opening Reception: Thursday, March 14, 2024, 6 p.m.–8 p.m.

Ben Brown Fine Arts is thrilled to announce ‘The Conspiracy of Blindness’, our fifth solo exhibition of British artist Gavin Turk at the London gallery. 

squeeze it orange drink, ecover toilet cleaner, vita chrysanthemum tea drink, maldon sea salt, encona thai sweet chilli sauce (red) by gavin turk

Gavin Turk

Squeeze It Orange Drink, Ecover Toilet Cleaner, Vita Chrysanthemum Tea Drink, Maldon Sea Salt, Encona Thai Sweet Chilli Sauce (Red), 2024

Price on Request

encona thai sweet chilli sauce (red), waitrose balsamic vinegar, cif original cream cleaner, delphi foods houmous by gavin turk

Gavin Turk

Encona Thai Sweet Chilli Sauce (Red), Waitrose Balsamic Vinegar, Cif Original Cream Cleaner, Delphi Foods Houmous, 2024

Price on Request

maldon sea salt flakes, cif original cream cleaner, morrisons thick bleach lemon, dr bronner's organic 18-in-1 rose pure-castile soap, duvel belgium strong blond, yeo valley organic whole milk, farm shop organic free range eggs by gavin turk

Gavin Turk

Maldon Sea Salt Flakes, Cif Original Cream Cleaner, Morrisons Thick Bleach Lemon, Dr Bronner's Organic 18-in-1 Rose Pure-Castile Soap, Duvel Belgium Strong Blond, Yeo Valley Organic Whole Milk, Farm Shop Organic Free Range Eggs, 2024

Price on Request

the original small beer, stainswick rapeseed oil, clearspring organic instant corn cous cous, vita coco pressed coconut water, astonish multi surface cleaner, maggi seasoning by gavin turk

Gavin Turk

The Original Small Beer, Stainswick Rapeseed Oil, Clearspring Organic Instant Corn Cous Cous, Vita Coco Pressed Coconut Water, Astonish Multi Surface Cleaner, Maggi Seasoning, 2024

Price on Request

Ben Brown Fine Arts is thrilled to announce ‘The Conspiracy of Blindness’, our fifth solo exhibition of British artist Gavin Turk at the London gallery (15th March – 10th May). The exhibition will reveal a recent series of still-life paintings that pay homage to early 20th century Italian artist Giorgio Morandi. In typical Turk style, he has subverted Morandi’s serene arrangements of vases and handmade vessels, by replacing the models with quotidian product packaging.    

Looking at the precious and overlooked nature of product packaging, I have become a domestic anthropologist, attempting to uncover the conspiracy of blindness imposed by ideological perspectives. - Gavin Turk   

The paintings in this anachronistic series are meticulously executed in a restricted tonal palette against a monochrome ground, some of the objects highlighted in accents of colour, inviting a close study of the rhythmically arranged lines and forms. The audience is encouraged to explore these curious juxtapositions, as empty containers from used products are elevated to classical models, while simultaneously reminding us of our consumer driven culture.  

Turk began this project by preserving and cataloguing used disposable packaging, in what the artist refers to as ‘an exercise in self-portraiture’. The artwork titles list the products depicted in each composition, offering a glimpse into Turk’s consumption habits and prompting reflection on the significance of these mundane artifacts as traces of human presence over time. As Turk aptly states, "We are what we throw away." Each work is set within a bespoke frame, suggesting a distinctive historical journey for each piece, culminating in their convergence for this exhibition.  

Through this exploration, the viewers are challenged to reconsider the implications of their daily consumer choices and draw awareness to the nostalgia and branding of consumer products. Turk is renowned for transforming banal, overlooked objects – refuse bags, apple cores, matchboxes, Styrofoam cups, shipping containers, a candle – into intricately constructed works of fine art, whether through his hand-painted bronzes or masterful canvas paintings, overthrowing art historical conventions, disrupting the canon, questioning authorship, and imploring critique of human behaviour and our relationship to relics of our time. This ingenious new body of work is at once tongue-in-cheek, visually and technically compelling, familiarly nostalgic, and provokes imperative reflection.