Ellen Harvey
American-British conceptual artist / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Ellen Harvey (born 1967) is an American-British conceptual artist known for her painting-based practice and site-specific works in installation, video, engraved mirrors, mosaic and glass.[1][2][3] She frequently pairs traditional representational vocabularies and genres (landscape, portraiture) with seemingly antithetical postmodern strategies, such as institutional critique, appropriation, mapping and pastiche.[1][4][5][6] Her work examines such themes as art as a mirror, interactions between built environment and landscape, ruins and the Picturesque aesthetic, and cultural and economic relationships between museums, artists and publics.[7][8][9][2] Curator Henriette Huldisch writes of her work, "haunted as it is by the notion of art's ultimate futility, her paradoxical stake is in persistently testing art's possibility to do something in the world after all."[1]
Ellen Harvey | |
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Born | 1967 (age 56ā57) Farnborough, Kent, United Kingdom |
Nationality | American-British |
Education | Harvard College Yale Law School |
Known for | Conceptual art, Painting, Installation art, Site-specific art, Public art, Institutional critique, Social practice |
Awards | John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, Wivina Demeester, Lily Auchincloss Foundation |
Website | Ellen Harvey |
Harvey has had solo exhibitions at the Whitney Museum at Philip Morris,[10] Corcoran Museum of Art,[11] Groeninge Museum[12] and Barnes Foundation,[13] and been featured in the Whitney, Prague and Kwangju Biennials,[14][15] and shows at MoMA PS1,[16] Turner Contemporary,[17] the Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art[18] and SMAK.[19] In 2016, she was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship.[20] She has been awarded public commissions in New York City, Chicago, Philadelphia, and San Francisco, and her 2016 Belgian project, Repeat, won the Wivina Demeester Prize for Commissioned Public Art.[19][21][22] Her work has been the subject of several books, including The Unloved: Ellen Harvey (2014), Ellen Harvey: Museum of Failure (2015), New York Beautification Project (2005/2021), and Ellen Harvey: The Disappointed Tourist (2021).[23][19][24][25] She lives with her husband and son in Brooklyn, New York.[21]