Art & Language

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Art & Language is a shifting collaboration among conceptual artists that has undergone many changes since its inception in the late 1960s.

The Art & Language group was founded in 1968 in the British by artists Terry Atkinson (b. 1939), David Bainbridge (b. 1941), Michael Baldwin (b. 1945) and Harold Hurrell (b. 1940), four artists who began collaborating around 1966 while teaching art in Coventry. Their early work, as well as their journal Art-Language, first published in 1969, is regarded as an important influence on much conceptual art both in the United Kingdom and in the United States. The name of the group was derived from the journal, which existed as a work in conversation as early as 1966.

In the early 1970s Ian Burn, Michael Corris, Charles Harrison, Preston Heller, Graham Howard, Joseph Kosuth, Andrew Menard, Mel Ramsden, Terry Smith and from Coventry Philip Pilkington and David Rushton merged their work with Art & Language. Burn and Ramsden co-founded The Society for Theoretical Art and Analysis in New York in the late 1960s.

Throughout the 1970s, Art & Language dealt with questions surrounding art production, and attempted a shift from the conventional "non-Linguistic" forms of art like painting and sculpture to more theoretically based works. The group often took up argumentative positions against such prevailing views of critics like Clement Greenberg and Michael Fried.

By the end of the 1970s the group was essentially reduced to Baldwin, Harrison and Ramsden. The political analysis that developed within the group resulted in many members leaving to work in more activist political occupations. Ian Burn and Terry Smith returned to Australia where they joined forces with Ian Milliss, a conceptual artist who had begun working with trade unions in the early 1970s, to set up Union Media Services, a design studio specialising in social marketing and community and trade union based art initiatives. Karl Beveridge and Carol Condé who had been peripheral members in New York, returned to Canada where they also began to work with trade unions and community groups. Other UK members drifted off into a variety of creative, academic and sometimes "politicised" occupations.

The Art & Language group that exhibited in the international Documenta exhibitions of 1972 included Atkinson, Bainbridge, Baldwin, Hurrell, Pilkington and Rushton and the then America editor of Art-Language Joseph Kosuth. In 1986, the remnants of the group were nominated for the Turner Prize.

[edit] Past Members & Associates


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