Tate Britain Exhibition

Mark Wallinger: State Britain Duveens Commission

Mark Wallinger State Britain 2006

Mark WallingerState Britain 2006

Photo: Sam Drake © Tate 2006

Mark Wallinger is one of Britain’s foremost contemporary artists and has been invited to produce an ambitious new work for the Duveen Galleries at Tate Britain. Wallinger’s work engages with questions of personal and national identity, history and belief systems. Typically uncompromising in scale and intention, this major site specific commission explores issues relating to the liberty of the individual and freedom of speech.

Mark Wallinger has recreated peace campaigner Brian Haw’s Parliament Square protest. Running along the full length of the Duveen Galleries, State Britain consists of a meticulous reconstruction of over 600 weather-beaten banners, photographs, peace flags and messages from well-wishers that have been amassed by Haw over the past five years.

Faithful in every detail, each section of Brian Haw’s peace camp from the makeshift tarpaulin shelter and tea-making area to the profusion of hand-painted placards and teddy bears wearing peace-slogan t-shirts has been painstakingly sourced and replicated for the display.

Fabrication of State Britain

Fabrication of State Britain

Brian Haw began his protest against the economic sanction in Iraq in June 2001, and has remained opposite the Palace of Westminster ever since. On 23 May 2006, following the passing by Parliament of the ‘Serious Organised Crime and Police Act’ prohibiting unauthorised demonstrations within a one kilometre radius of Parliament Square, the majority of Haw’s protest was removed. Taken literally, the edge of this exclusion zone bisects Tate Britain. Wallinger has marked a line on the floor of the galleries throughout the building, positioning State Britain half inside and half outside the border.

In bringing a reconstruction of Haw’s protest before curtailment back into the public domain, Wallinger raises challenging questions about issues of freedom of expression and the erosion of civil liberties in Britain today.

State Britain is the latest in an ongoing series of contemporary sculpture commissions whose previous contributors include Michael Landy, Mona Hatoum and Anya Gallaccio. The series builds on a long tradition of exhibitions in the Duveen Galleries, which has included memorable installations by Richard Long, Richard Serra and Luciano Fabro.

This display contains images of human suffering which some visitors may find distressing.

Mark Wallinger State Britain 2006

Mark Wallinger State Britain 2006

About the artist

State Britain is Wallinger's first major project in London since Ecce Homo 1999, one of his most celebrated works to date, a modern day, life-size Christ figure crowned with barbed-wire thorns that temporarily occupied The Fourth Plinth in Trafalgar Square, London.

Wallinger was born in Chigwell in 1959. He lives and works in London. He studied at Chelsea School of Art, London (1978–81) and Goldsmiths’ College, London (1983–5). Since the mid-1980s Wallinger’s primary concern has been to establish a valid critical approach to the ‘politics of representation and the representation of politics’ and has often explored issues of the responsibilities of individuals and those of society in his work. He was shortlisted for the Turner Prize in 1995 and represented Britain at the 49th Venice Biennale in 2001.

State Britain is curated by Clarrie Wallis, Curator, Tate Britain in collaboration with the artist.

Tate Britain

Millbank
London SW1P 4RG
Plan your visit

Dates

15 January – 27 August 2007

Find out more

  • Mark Wallinger wins the Turner Prize 2007

    Mark Wallinger wins the Turner Prize 2007: Press related to past event.

  • Mark Wallinger: State Britain

    Mark Wallinger has recreated peace campaigner Brian Haw’s Parliament Square protest for a dramatic new installation at Tate Britain. Running along the full length of the Duveen Galleries, State Britain consists of a meticulous reconstruction of over 600 w

  • Mark Wallinger: State Britain

    Mark Wallinger has recreated peace campaigner Brian Haw’s Parliament Square protest for State Britain his Duveens Galleries commission in Tate Britain.

  • Captive audience

    Christy Lange

    When, in 2003, magician David Blaine starved himself in a Plexiglas box suspended above the Thames, hecklers pelted him with kebabs. In 2004 Mark Wallinger stayed in Berlin’s Nueue Nationalgalerie for nine nights in a bear suit, and a small group of viewers such as Christy Lange peered at him alone in the museum. Christy reflects on Sleeper.

  • Artist

    Mark Wallinger

    born 1959