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Press Release
Under embargo until Thursday
22 May
NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY
TO UNVEIL ITS LATEST COMMISSION - A PORTRAIT OF NOBEL PRIZE WINNING
SCIENTIST SIR PAUL NURSE BY BRITISH ARTIST JASON BROOKS
The National Portrait Gallery
is delighted to announce the unveiling of its latest commission,
a portrait of the Nobel Prize winning scientist, Sir Paul Nurse,
by acclaimed British artist Jason Brooks. The painting, a large-scale
black and white close-up of the scientist's face, cropped to
give a cinematic effect, shows every pore, every follicle, every
trace of time worn into the human face. This is the largest painting
in such a realist style that the National Portrait Gallery has
acquired.
To place this commission in the
wider context of Brooks's work, the portrait of Sir Paul Nurse
will be displayed alongside two other portraits by the artist
- a new portrait of Formula One racing driver Jenson Button,
exhibited for the first time, and an earlier work entitled 'Zoe'
taken from the 'Tattooed' series. All three portraits relate
to Brooks's fascination with mortality and the fugitive image:
Nurse is a pioneering scientist who specialises in cancer research;
Jenson Button is engaged in a death-defying sport and Zoe endures
pain to decorate her body with permanent tattoos. 'What's really
important to me,' says Brooks 'is having that pornographic gaze,
that forensic detail. The flaws, the marks -they're the things
that I fall in love with.'
Brooks uses his own large-format
photographs as the source material for his painting, although
he does not regard himself as a photorealist. 'My work is ephemeral,'
he says 'and that relates to photography, the funereal aspect
of photography, capturing that frozen moment.'
He applies paint with precision
using an airbrush to create every detail. By using this tool
Brooks intentionally creates a dispassionate distance between
himself and the subject.
The portrait of Sir Paul Nurse
was developed through a series of meetings between artist and
sitter in New York and London. Without overtly referencing Nurse's
biological research, Brooks explores through his painting process
the scientist's essential make-up and structure. 'I didn't want
it to reference science overtly,' he explains 'but it does explore
genealogy, the make-up of the human form.' From a distance the
painting is sharply defined, but close-up it is made up of abstracted
forms; an attempt, in the artist's words, to 'get lost in somebody's
structure'.
Sir Paul Nurse (b. 1949) was
awarded the 2001 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (jointly
with Dr Tim Hung and Dr Leland Hartwell) for his work on the
genes that regulate the cell division cycle. His important discoveries
have improved our understanding of how cancer cells divide.
He was formerly Chief Executive of Cancer Research UK, the largest
charity in the United Kingdom. He has been President of Rockefeller
University in New York since 2003, where he continues his research.
He was awarded the Royal Society's Copley Medal in 2005.
Jason Brooks (b. 1968) studied
at Cheltenham College of Art and Chelsea College of Art, London.
He was a prizewinner in John Moores 20 in 1997 and won
the NatWest Art Prize in 1999. He exhibits regularly at Stellan
Holm Gallery in New York. His work is in collections abroad and
in the United Kingdom including the Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool
and Saatchi Collection, London.
The portrait of Sir Paul Nurse
by Jason Brooks was commissioned by the Trustees and made possible
with support from JP Morgan through the Fund for New Commissions.
The display Jason Brooks
Portraits opens at the National Portrait Gallery, London,
on Friday 23 May 2008.
For further press information
and image requests please contact: Catherine Bromley, Press Office, National Portrait
Gallery Tel: 020 7321 6620 (not for publication) Email: cbromley@npg.org.uk
; To download images: www.npg.org.uk/press
National Portrait Gallery
opening hours Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday, Saturday, Sunday: 10am - 6pm (Gallery closure
commences at 5.50pm) Late Opening: Thursday, Friday: 10am
- 9pm (Gallery closure commences at 8.50pm) Nearest Underground:
Leicester Square/Charing Cross Recorded information: 020
7312 2463 General information: 020 7306 0055 Website:
www.npg.org.uk
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