Sam Taylor Wood
27-Oct-2009
Sam Taylor-Wood makes photographs and films that examine, through highly charged scenarios, our shared social and psyschological conditions.
Taylor-Wood’s work examines the split between being and appearance,
often placing her human subjects – either singly or in groups – in
situations where the line between interior and external sense of self
is in conflict. Her languid and silent film portrait of David Beckham,
for example, which was shot in a single take, offers a serene
alternative to this most intensively photographed celebrity. In Prelude
in Air (2006) Taylor-Wood filmed a musician playing a piece of cello
music by Bach, but the cello itself has been erased. Likewise, in
Breach (Girl and Eunuch) (2001), a girl is portrayed sitting on the
floor in the throes of grief, but the sound of her tears has been
removed. In the celebrated film Still Life (2001), an impossibly
beautiful bowl of fruit decays at an accelerated pace, creating a
visceral momento mori. Taylor-Wood has also explored notions of weight
and gravity in elegiac, poised photographs and films such as Ascension
(2003) and a series of self-portraits (Self Portrait Suspended I -
VIII) that depict the artist floating in mid air without the aid of any
visible support. In her film The Last Century (2006), what appears to
be a static image of a group of people slowly reveals itself to be a
real, filmed take, timed to the length of a burning cigarette: the film
is entirely static apart from the involuntary blinking, twitching and
barely-visible breathing of four motionless actors, all arranged around
a central figure as if in a group portrait painted by Rembrandt or
Caravaggio. Recently, Taylor-Wood directed her first narrative short
film, Love You More (2008), with a script by Patrick Marber.
Sam Taylor-Wood was born in London in 1967 and has had numerous group
and solo exhibitions, including the Venice Biennale (1997) and The
Turner Prize (1998). Solo exhibitions include Kunsthalle Zurich (1997),
Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Humlebaek (1997), Hirshhorn Museum and
Sculpture Garden, Washington DC (1999), Museo Nacional Centro de Arte
Reina Sofia, Madrid (2000), Hayward Gallery, London (2002), State
Russian Museum, St Petersburg (2004), MCA, Moscow (2004), BALTIC,
Gateshead (2006), MCA Sydney (2006) MoCA Cleveland (2007) and the
Contemporary Art Museum, Houston (2008).
