Michael Dean

4 Shores

2016

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Not on display

Artist
Michael Dean born 1977
Medium
Concrete, steel, paper, paint, paperback book and ink
Dimensions
Unconfirmed: 1810 × 1320 × 1160 mm
Collection
Tate
Acquisition
Purchased 2017
Reference
T14849

Summary

4 shores is one of a group of sculptures made for the artist’s South London Gallery exhibition in 2016 and exhibited in his Turner Prize exhibition at Tate Britain later the same year. Shored (Working Title) 2016 (Tate T14850) and ffff (working title) 2016 (Tate T14851) were also included in these exhibitions. Dean habitually works in series, creating a body of work around a particular word which he likes to wring out and explore until, for him, its meaning has been exhausted. The word that he focused on for his South London Gallery and Turner Prize exhibitions was ‘shore’, in both its literal meanings as the place where land and sea meet, and ‘to shore up’, to support or hold up, but also its colloquial abbreviation ‘sho’ or ‘sure’. The titles of all of the works, including any misspellings or inconsistent capitalisations, are as intended by the artist. 4 shores is formed of two pieces of concrete mixed with blue pigment, which have been shaped around steel into long tubes; one tube stands upright while the other lays at its base, twisted into a triangular shape. Copies of the artist’s book Now Leaves 2015 have been coarsely dyed in the same blue pigment as the concrete and are placed on top of the upright tube, as well as on the floor in front of the triangular piece.

Dean is interested in the potential of words to be expressed in material form. Early in his career, the main component of his work was his writing, manifested as short texts, self-published books, sentences and dialogues, alongside small linguistic configurations of found objects and photography. Subsequently, his sculptures have become larger, using materials that are instantly recognisable from everyday life – concrete, steel, anti-vandal paint and corrugated iron. Dean produces these works by translating excerpts of his writing into a typeface of his own design, from which he then generates moulds and casts. The significant factor is not that the sculptures are decipherable as words, but rather that the viewer should be able to faintly discern language in their forms, with a word or an idea being just about imaginable. As such, the sculptures become instigators of individual engagement, as well as spaces through which to explore subjectivity in language and in art. Their human scale and at times oddly anthropomorphic aspect sets up a relationship with the body of the reader/viewer, and their own physicality in the exhibition space. Displayed in related groups and read in this way, Dean’s sculptures highlight the mediating position of language between an author/artist and the reader/viewer.

The industrial nature of Dean’s materials, combined with their anthropomorphic nature and scale, gives his objects the appearance of having been lifted from a building site, a docklands or an industrial estate. His work displays a heightened sensitivity to the physical properties of the materials used, playing with steel’s propensity to rust, the malleability and familiarity of corrugated sheet metal and, significantly, the porosity of concrete – a material that, even when set, can be stained by its environment, absorbing leaks and drips and the traces of human touch – endowing Dean’s work with an organic appearance that looks simultaneously manmade and naturally formed.

Further reading
Paul Teasdale, ‘Michael Dean: In Focus’, Frieze, no.143, November–December 2011, https://frieze.com/article/focus-michael-dean, accessed 1 November 2016.
Michael Dean, Lisa Le Feuvre, Pavel S. Pys, Michael Dean: Selected Writings, Milan 2012.
Laura Smith and Linsey Young, ‘Michael Dean’, in Turner Prize 2016, exhibition catalogue, Tate Britain, London 2016.

Linsey Young and Laura Smith
November 2016

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