Post-YBAs
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Post-YBAs refers to British artists emerging in the 2000s after the Young British Artists.
Post-YBA artists include Tim Noble and Sue Webster,[1] Carey Young[2], Oliver Payne and Nick Relph[3], David Thorpe[4], Eva Rothschild,[5] Mike Nelson[6] and Darren Almond.[7]
According to Matthew Higgs, Simon Starling’s winning of the Turner Prize in 2005 reflected a post-YBA sensibility which is more modestly material and formal than spectacle-driven.[8] Enrico David tapped into a post-YBA vogue for craft.[9] The post-YBA generation has also been associated with neo-conceptual art with a political edge.[10]
Movements associated with the post-YBAs include Martin Maloney’s bad painting.[11]
[edit] References
- ^ Village Voice, November 17, 2003
- ^ artext, Spring, 2002
- ^ ArtForum, Jan 2004
- ^ Matthew Sweet, The Independent, Oct 23, 2004
- ^ Laura Cumming, The Observer, April 9, 2006.
- ^ The Guardian, Sept 4, 2001
- ^ The Independent, January 17, 2008.
- ^ artnet Magazine, Dec 6, 2005
- ^ timeout.com, accessed 7 December, 2007.
- ^ Jonathan Jones, The Guardian, September 30, 2000.
- ^ telegraph.co.uk, May 27, 2004, accessed Sept 11, 2007
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