Gilbert & George
(1943-; 1942-), ArtistsSitter in 14 portraits
Artist of 1 portrait
Operating as one artist, Gilbert Proesch (b.1943) and George Passmore (b.1942) met in the 1960s, when they were both studying at St Martin's School of Art, London. They have lived and worked together as Gilbert & George since 1968. Moving to the working-class neighbourhood of Spitalfields, London, they revolted against art's elitism, naming their work 'Art for all' and declaring themselves 'living sculptures'. They later produced conceptual pieces and photo-works. In 1986, Gilbert & George were awarded the Turner Prize and in 2005, represented Britain at the Venice Biennale. Solo exhibitions include those at the Pompidou Centre, Paris (1981), the Baltimore Museum of Art (1984), the Guggenheim (1985) and a major retrospective at Tate Modern (2007).
Gilbert & George ('IN THE PISS')
by Gilbert & George
hand-coloured gelatin silver prints, in nine parts, 1997
On display in Room 28 on Floor 2 at the National Portrait Gallery
NPG 6489
by Horst P. Horst
modern print from original negative, 1970s
NPG x137756
by Julian Cottrell
print on Hahnemuhle Photo Rag Bright White paper, 1971
NPG x133161
by Julian Cottrell
silver bromide print, 1971
NPG x133162
by David Gwinnutt
modern bromide print from original negative, 1981-1982
NPG x199670
by Michael James O'Brien
archival digital print, 1987
NPG x138158
by Chris Garnham
bromide fibre print, July 1987
NPG x38383
by Daniel Farson
resin print, 1990
NPG x135681
by Daniel Farson
resin print, 1990
NPG x135682
'The British Council 70 Years at the Venice Biennale'
by Julian Germain
archival inkjet print, 21 October 2009
NPG x132893
by Derry Moore, 12th Earl of Drogheda
bromide fibre print, 1997
NPG x126967
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