Tony_Cragg's_New_Forms.jpgTony_Cragg's_Subcommittee.jpg Tony Cragg (born 1949) is a British-born sculptor.
Cragg was born in Liverpool, and following a period of work as a laboratory technician, he first studied art on the foundation course at the Gloucestershire College of Art and Design, Cheltenham and then at the Wimbledon School of Art1969-1973. During this period he was taught by Roger Ackling, who introduced him to the sculptors Richard Long and Bill Woodrow. He completed his studies on the sculpture course at Royal College of Art1973-1977 where he was a contemporary of Richard Deacon and Richard Wentworth. He left Britain in 1977 and moved to Wuppertal in Germany, where he has lived and worked since.
Many of Cragg's early works are made from found materials, discarded construction materials and disposed household objects. This gave him a large range of mainly man-made materials and automatically provided him with the thematic concerns that became characteristic of his work up to the present. During the 1970's he made sculptures using simple making techniques like stacking, splitting and crushing. In 1978 he collected discarded plastic fragments and arranged them into colour catagories. The first work of this kind was called 'New Stones-Newtons Tones'. Shortly after this he made works on the floor and wall reliefs which created images. One of these works , Britain Seen From the North (1981), features the shape of the island of Great Britain on the wall, oriented so that north is to the left. To the left of the island is the figure of a man, apparently Cragg himself, looking at the country from the position of an outsider. The whole piece is made from broken pieces of found rubbish and is often interpreted as commenting on the economic difficulties Britain was going through at that time which had a particular effect on the north.
Later, Cragg used more traditional materials, such as wood, bronze and marble, often making simple forms from them, such as test tubes.
Cragg won the Turner Prize in 1988.
1949 births | Living people | British sculptors | Contemporary sculptors | Turner Prize winners | Liverpudlians
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