Marc Quinn


  • → Marc Quinn: Siren, Book by Germaine Greer, Marc Quinn, and Will Self, 2008

    → Marc Quinn: Selfs, Book by Marc Quinn, 2009

    → Marc Quinn, Book by Marc Quinn, 1998

  • → 'History Painting +', Yale Center for British Art, New Haven 2022

    → 'HISTORYNOW', National Archaeological Museum, Venice 2022

    → 'Face to Face: Marc Quinn meets Franz Xavier Messserschmidt', Belvedere Museum, Vienna 2022

    → ‘Frozen Wave (The Conservation of Memory)’, Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art, University of Oregon 2020

    → 'Under the Skin', The Central Academy of Fine Arts, Beijing 2019

Marc Quinn was born in London. He first learned to cast in bronze in 1983, while working as an assistant to Barry Flanagan. He graduated from Cambridge University in 1986. His first solo show was held in 1988 at the Jay Jopling/Otis Gallery, London. He was selected for the Sydney Biennale in 1992, and was represented in Young British Artists II at the Saatchi Gallery in 1993, and Time Machine at the British Museum in 1994. He participated in Thinking Print at the Museum of Modern Art, New York in 1996 and Sensation at the Royal Academy, London in 1997. He had a solo show at the South London Gallery, Camberwell, London in 1998.

Quinn is often associated with Damien Hirst as one of the founding figures of the 1990s British contemporary art movement. Self (1991, Saatchi Collection, London), a self-portrait head made from his own frozen blood, was first exhibited in 1991 at the Jay Jopling/Grob Gallery and then at the Saatchi Gallery in 1992. At the Tate Gallery in 1995, the artist showed Emotional Detox: The Seven Deadly Sins, a group of seven lead casts of parts of his body which were made using the lost wax method. The pieces are reminiscent of the 'character heads' made by Franz Xaver Messerschmidt in the late eighteenth century. Quinn prefers to use his own body as a primary source, as it is free from the associations of implied relationships: 'the self is what one knows best and least at the same time ... casting the body gives one an opportunity to "see" the self' (conversation with Sean Rainbird, Tate Gallery, 1995).

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