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More than 200 artists, musicians, writers, and arts professionals from forty countries have pledged to take part in Hands Off Our Revolution, a global art project that will organize a series of exhibitions and other programming that will confront the rise of right-wing populism around the world.
Read MoreBritish sculptor among hundreds of leading figures producing events for Hands Off Our Revolution collective.
Read MoreTacita Dean, Ed Ruscha and Frances Morris sign-up in support of the Hands off our Revolution movement.
Read MoreLimited edition posters from artists including Jeremy Deller and David Shrigley, will be given away at London Tube stations next week.
Read MoreTen artists have been chosen to display artworks on sites across the London Tube network, as part of Art on the Underground’s latest campaign stating London is united and open to the world following the EU referendum.
Read MoreDavid Shrigley unveiled a new poster for the campaign supporting London's diversity.
Read More“Transparency” is an ongoing exhibition at the Yorkshire Sculpture Park, which runs through September 4.
Read MoreThe Delfina Foundation, London’s largest international host and provider of international residencies, is staging a selling exhibition this October to raise funds to support the next generation of artists.
Read More10 Opening Exhibitions to Watch
Read MoreAn Olympic-inspired art project is off the ground and on the top of bus shelters thanks to a Turner Prize-nominated artist. Bus-Tops is a digital
Read MoreWe are pleased to announce We’ve All Got Issues: Video Art from the APT Collection the first ever online, selling exhibition of video art featuring 16 videos by an international roster of member artists from Artist Pension Trust® (APT). The show is hosted by MutualArt.com and will be up for a period of two weeks from May 29 to June 12, 2014. All works will be shown in their full-length versions and made available for purchase through the website.
Read MoreAn Olympic-inspired art project is off the ground and on the top of bus shelters thanks to a Turner Prize-nominated artist. Bus-Tops is a digital
Read MoreIn September of this year I traveled to Wolverhampton, U.K. to present some of my research on Black Metal and contemporary art to the Home of Metal
Read MoreMuseo de Arte de Ponce opens 2013 in a big way with a curated exhibition of British art entitled The Art of the Empire: Three Centuries of British Art alongside an installation of contemporary art titled Art in Response: Jorge Díaz Torres.
Read MoreAn exhibition inspired by heavy metal music will be on display in the Midlands next week. A celebration of the music genre, Home of Metal is a large
Read MoreOne of the best-kept secrets on the art world calendar is the biannual fundraiser at the Drawing Room, a gallery in a Victorian warehouse on a side street in London's Bethnal Green.
Read MoreIn February, a sculpture of a man who looks like he might be walking through a storm sold for a record breaking £65 million.
Read MorePARIS.- For the first time in its history, ArtParis is acting on the urban public scene with Move For Life, a mobile art intervention against poverty,
Read MoreThe South London Gallery’s idea to open with wall drawings and paintings is a good one — when you have a shiny suite of rooms to show off, the last
Read MoreAn extremely well-appointed one bedroom flat, complete with north-facing terrace and its own lift down to an art gallery, cafe and garden
Read MoreThis week, E2 may feel a little on the fringes of the Frieze blast zone radiating from central London. But the art fair presence of many of the bigger commercial spaces does not mean the heart of the East End gallery district is closed for business. For a rash of high profile opening parties about to happen at venues such as Victoria Miro, Maureen Paley and Vilma Gold will likely increase the footfall around certain pockets of Hackney. So how are the area’s smaller spaces dealing with the prospect of the international art community headed this way? Judging by the literary, philosophical and socially engaged projects on offer – with wit, sobriety and a characteristic air of nonchalance...
Read MoreWhat is the relevance of artists in today’s society and how can their work change the status quo? These are some of the questions posed
Read MoreA 24 carat gold leaf wall painting, a 40 metre high design on a tower block and a 5,000 word film script hand-written directly on the gallery walls
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Born in 1973 in Luton, United Kingdom, Mark Titchner lives and works in London. Titcher uses a wide range of media, including print, sculpture, text, and video. His work pivots around the resurrection of dead forms and letters, often reinvesting the sterile language of revolutionary slogans and corporate mottos with the mystical promise of a second coming, a new revolution or a utopian world. Reminiscent of Futurist design and science fiction iconography from the 1960s and 70s, his work combines modernist forms with New Age diagrams and figures, layering avant-garde manifestos, managerial lingo and self-help catch phrases in order to create a complex aesthetic language at once potent and barren. Far from nostalgic, Titchner’s work uses these forms and texts in order to critically reflect upon the contemporary formation of a liquid subject, situated between the “I” and the “we”, equally capable of responding to the ever-changing demands of post-capitalist production as of melding into the revolutionary ideal of the multitude.
Mark Titchner has recently presented solo exhibitions and projects at Vilma Gold, London (2010), Art House Foundation, London (2010), the Hellenic American Union, Athens (2009), Broadway cinema/backlit studios, Nottingham (2009), Peres Projects, Berlin (2008) and BALTIC, Gateshead (2008). His work has also been shown as part of “Nothing is Forever” at the South London Gallery, London (2010), "The Dark Monarch: Magic and Modernity in British Art” at Tate St. Ives, Cornwall (2009), "Black Hole" at CCA Andratx, Mallorca (2009), "ARTLV 08" at the Tel Aviv Museum of Art, Tel Aviv (2008), "A Poem about an Inland Sea", the 52nd Venice Biennale, Venice (2007) and "Left Pop”, the 2nd Moscow Biennale of Contemporary Art, Moscow (2007). He has been short-listed for the Turner Prize at Tate Britain, London (2006).
Mark Titchner is represented by Vilma Gold, London and Peres Projects, Los Angeles and Berlin.
For additional information about this artist, visit Mutual Art