Marc Quinn, Exhibition Catalogue, Montreal, 2007
Marc Quinn 2007 Foundation for Contemporary Art Book Paperback, English, French, Some wear to cover. Full color illustrations. Includes “Skeleton” Centefold which opens up. More photos acvaiable upon request.
MARC QUINN
October 5, 2007 – January 6, 2008
Curated by John Zeppetelli
DHC/ART Foundation for Contemporary Art
451 rue St-Jean
Montreal, Québec
H2Y 2R5
(514) 866-6767
www.dhc-art.org
Condition: Very Good: A book that does not look new and has been read but is in excellent condition.
No missing or damaged pages, no creases or tears, and no underlining/highlighting of text or writing in the margins.
Asking USD$50
Includes 6 x 8.25 invitation mini flyer that opens up.
Marc Quinn
Lives and works in London
1985
BA History of Art, University of Cambridge
1964
Born in London
Marc Quinn (British, born 1964) is a leading contemporary artist. He first came to prominence in the early 1990s, when he and several peers redefined what it was to make and experience contemporary art. Marc Quinn makes art about what it is to be a person living in the world – whether it concerns Man’s relationship with nature and how that is mediated by human desire; or what identity and beauty mean and why people are compelled to transform theirs; or representing current, social history in his work. His work also connects frequently and meaningfully with art history, from Modern masters right back to antiquity.
Quinn came to prominence in 1991 with his sculpture Self (1991, a cast of the artist’s head, made entirely of his blood, which is frozen and kept at sub-zero temperatures by its own refrigerated display unit. It is the purest form of self portrait (being of the artist – both in appearance and material) but also a comment on Man’s need for infrastructure, as the sculpture is kept ‘alive’ only by a mains electricity supply. This symbolism can be substituted for other forms of dependence, not least addiction – something the artist experienced early in his career. Other critically acclaimed works include Garden (2000), a full botanical garden frozen and displayed in Fondazione Prada, Milan; DNA Portrait of Sir John Sulston (2001), a genomic portrait of the genetic scientist Sir John Sulston, and Evolution (2005), ten sculptures depicting human embryos throughout the stages of its development. Major public installations include 1+1=3 (2002), a 20 metre artificial rainbow created for the Liverpool Biennale; Planet (2008), a monumental rendition of the artist’s son as a baby, permanently installed at The Gardens by The Bay Singapore; All of Nature Flows Through Us (2011), a ten meter bronze iris installed at Kistefos-Museet Norway; and Alison Lapper Pregnant (2005), a fifteen-ton marble statue of the heavily pregnant and disabled Alison Lapper, exhibited on the fourth plinth of London’s Trafalgar Square and later reinvented as a colossal inflatable sculpture, Breath (2012), for the 2012 Paralympics opening ceremony. Quinn has received international recognition for a series of sculptures of the model Kate Moss in a variety of yogic poses, including Siren (2008) – a solid gold sculpture of the model Kate Moss displayed at The British Museum, London. Quinn is also well known for his hyperrealist oil paintings of flowers and photorealist paintings of irises, created using an airbrush.
He has exhibited internationally in museums and galleries including Tate Gallery, London (1995), South London Gallery, (1998), Kunstverein Hannover(1999), Fondazione Prada, Milan (2000), Tate Liverpool (2002), National Portrait Gallery, London (2002), MACRO, Rome (2006), Fondation Beyeler, Basel (2009), <a
Goss-Michael Foundation, Dallas (2009),
Musée Océanographique, Monaco (2012), Fondazione Giorgio Cini, Venice (2013) and Arter, Space for Art, Istanbul (2014) and Somerset House, London (2015).</a
Catalogue Information:
Gathering over forty recent works, DHC/ART’s inaugural exhibition by conceptual artist Marc Quinn is the largest ever mounted in North America and the artist’s first solo show in Canada. Marc Quinn is a central figure within British art whose work is principally concerned with the body’s mutability in time, its physical presence in space and its anxiety within culture. His work also poignantly explores mortality, beauty, kinship and the interplay of art and science.
Marc Quinn’s work ranges across a variety of media – from sculpture to painting, drawing and photography – and includes dazzling, if contentious, frozen self-portraits cast from his own head and filled with his own blood to frozen portraits of his infant sons made with their respective placentas and umbilical chords. The latest of these, Sky, is included in this exhibition.
Quinn’s The Complete Marbles, a suite of sculptural portraits of amputees and disabled individuals in sparkling white marble allude to fragmented Greco-Roman statuary while slyly addressing heroism. Quinn has made DNA portraits of his family and of scientist John Sulston, paintings of improbable gardens, and highly evocative wax castings of people with life-threatening illnesses – Chemical Life Support– where the wax is mixed with daily doses of the medications that keep the individuals alive. Another wax portrait of a serene young woman Beauty and the Beast is colored darkly by animal blood.
Digitally manipulated animal flesh is the basis for two stunning Mirror Paintings on view, as well as for Cybernetically Engineered, Cloned and Grown Rabbit, a seven foot bronze sculpture, at once comic and melancholy, of a shaped rabbit carcass. Quinn has arrested the decay of flowers by immersing them in sub-zero silicone and made painted bronze sculptures of supermodel Kate Moss in extreme contortions. Other bronzes include a series of human skeletons, among them The Selfish Gene, which depicts a couple in the throes of love-making.
In 2004 Marc Quinn won a major public art commission for the Fourth Plinth: his Alison Lapper Pregnant, a large marble portrait of a naked, severely disabled and very pregnant woman was installed in London’s Trafalgar Square – a bold and powerful tribute to both disability and motherhood. A fully illustrated catalogue with essays by British art historian Lynda Nead and Montreal psychoanalyst Harvey Giesbrecht accompanies the exhibition.
https://phi.ca/en/events/marc-quinn/
Solo Exhibitions
2022
‘History Painting +’, Yale Center for British Art, New Haven
‘HISTORYNOW’, National Archaeological Museum, Venice
‘Face to Face: Marc Quinn meets Franz Xavier Messserschmidt’, Belvedere Museum, Vienna
2020
‘Frozen Wave (The Conservation of Memory)’, Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art, University of Oregon
2019
‘Under the Skin’, The Central Academy of Fine Arts, Beijing
‘History & Chaos’, The Goss Michael Foundation, Dallas
2017
‘ Drawn from Life‘, Sir John Soane’s Museum, London
‘Thames River Water’, Ivorypress, Madrid
2016
‘Frozen Wave (The Conservation of Mass)’, Museum of Islamic Art, Qatar
2015
‘Frozen Waves, Broken Sublimes‘, Somerset House, London
‘The Toxic Sublime‘, White Cube, London
‘History Painting’, BOX, Berlin
2014
‘Violence and Serenity’, Centro de Arte Contemporáneo (CAC), Málaga
‘The Sleep of Reason (Aklın Uykusu)’, ARTER Space for Art, Istanbul
2013
‘Held by Desire’, White Cube, Hong Kong
‘Marc Quinn’, Fondazione Giorgio Cini, San Giorgio, Venice
‘Chelsea Flower Show’, London
‘All the Time in the World’, Mary Boone Gallery, New York
‘Planet’, Gardens by the Bay, Singapore (permanent installation)
2012
London, 2012 Paralympics, centre sculpture in the Opening Ceremony, “Breath”
‘Marc Quinn: All of Nature Flows Through Us’, Museum of Modern Art Aalborg, Denmark
‘Brave New World‘, Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, Salzburg
‘Big Wheel Keeps on Turning (Марк Куинн «Большое колесо продолжает вращаться»)’, Multimedia Art Museum, Moscow
‘The Littoral Zone‘, Musée Océanographique de Monaco, Monaco
2011
‘All of Nature Flows Through Us’, Kistefos Museum, Jevnaker, Norway
2010
’33°53’13’’N35°30’17’’E’, LAB Art, The Platinum Tower, Beirut
‘Allanah, Buck, Catman, Chelsea, Michael, Pamela and Thomas’, White Cube, London
‘Marc Quinn’, Patricia Low Contemporary, Gstaad, Switzerland
2009
‘Iris’, Mary Boone Gallery, New York
‘Marc Quinn’, Goss-Michael Foundation, Dallas
‘Selfs‘, Fondation Beyeler, Basel
‘Materialise, Dematerialise’, Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, Salzburg
‘Carbon Cycle‘, Galerie Daniel Blau, Munich
‘Myth’, Casa Giuleta, Verona
2008
‘Marc Quinn: Evolution‘, White Cube, London
‘Before, Now and After’, Galerie Hopkins-Custot, Paris
‘Marc Quinn’, Gana Art Centre, Seoul
‘Alison Lapper Pregnant’, The Forum, Rome
2007
‘Marc Quinn‘, DHC/ART Foundation for Contemporary Art, Montreal
‘Marc Quinn (Scolacium Archaeological Park)’, Parco Internazionale della Scultura, Museo MARCA, Catanzaro, Italy
‘Sphinx’, Mary Boone Gallery, New York
2006
‘Paintings’, Emanuele Bonomi, Milan
‘Marc Quinn’, MACRO Museo d’Arte Contemporanea, Rome
‘Recent Sculpture’, Groninger Museum, Groninger, The Netherlands
‘Marc Quinn’, Galerie Hopkins-Custot, Paris
‘Chemical Life Support’, Millesgarden, Stockholm
2005
‘Marc Quinn’, Galeria Guereta, Madrid
‘Marc Quinn: Fourth Plinth, Alison Lapper Pregnant‘, Fourth Plinth, Trafalgar Square, London (2005 – 2007)
‘Chemical Life Support’, White Cube, London
‘Flesh: Meat Sculptures’, Mary Boone Gallery, New York
2004
‘The Incredible World of Desire’, IBM Building, New York
‘Marc Quinn’, Atkinson Gallery, Millfield School, Somerset, United Kingdom
‘Flesh’, Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin
‘The Complete Marbles’, Mary Boone Gallery, New York
2003
‘Mirror’, Power House, Memphis
‘The Overwhelming World of Desire (Paphiopedilum Winston Churchill Hybrid)’, Goodwood Sculpture Park, United Kingdom and Tate Britain, London
2002
‘Behind the Mask – Portraits’, Hatton Gallery, Newcastle
‘1+1=3 (Rainbow Sculpture)’, Cammell Laird Shipyard, Liverpool
‘Marc Quinn’, Tate Liverpool
‘Italian Landscapes from Garden 2000’, Terrace Gallery Harewood, Leeds
2001
‘A Genomic Portrait – Sir John Sulston by Marc Quinn’, National Portrait Gallery, London
‘Italian Landscape’, Habitat, London
‘Marc Quinn – Garden’, Art of This Century, Paris
2000
‘Still Life’, White Cube, London
‘Marc Quinn’, Groninger Museum, Groningen, The Netherlands
‘Marc Quinn’, Fondazione Prada, Milan
1999
‘Marc Quinn’, Kunstverein Hannover, Germany
‘Marc Quinn – Drawings’, Sala Amárica-Amarica Aretoa, Victoria, Spain
1998
‘Incarnate’, Gagosian Gallery, New York
‘Marc Quinn’, South London Gallery, London
1997
‘Infra-Slim Spaces’, Invisible Museum, SCCA, Kiev
1995
‘The Blind Leading the Blind’, White Cube, London
‘Emotional Detox – The Seven Deadly Sins – Art Now’, Tate Gallery, London
1994
‘Marc Quinn’, Art Hotel, Amsterdam
1993
‘Marc Quinn’, Galerie Jean Bernier, Athens
1991
‘Out of Time’, Grob Gallery, London
1990
‘Bread Sculpture’, Galerie Marquardt, Paris and Middendorf Gallery, Washington
1988
‘Bronze Sculpture’, Otis Gallery, London
Group Exhibitions
2023
‘Wasser, Wolken, Wind – Elementar- und Wetterphänome in den Werken der Sammlung Würth’, Forum Würth Rorschach, Switzerland
2022
‘Take Care: Art and Medicine’, Kunsthaus Zurich
‘Flowers in Art’, Arken Museum of Modern Art, Arken
2021
‘imPERFEKT’, MEWO Kunsthalle, Memmingen
‘Corpus Domini’, Palazzo Reale, Milan
‘The Magic of Gold’, Arken Museum of Modern Art, Copenhagen
‘Christian Dior: Designer of Dreams’, Brooklyn Museum, New York
2020
Iconic Works, group exhibition, Nationalmuseum, Stockholm and Ateneum, Helsinki
‘Portraying Pregnancy: From Holbein to Social Media,’ The Foundling Museum, London
‘Tides of the Century: 202 Ocean Flower Island International Exhibition, 2020
2019
‘Self-Conscious Gene’ in the Medicine Galleries, Science Museum, London
‘Phytopia’, Glynn Vivian Art Gallery, Swansea
2018
‘Like Life: Sculpture, Color, and the Body (1300-Now)’, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
‘The Classical Now’, The Arcade at Bush House, London
‘You are Faust: Goethe’s Drama in the Arts’, Kunsthalle Munchen, Munich
‘Leonard Cohen: A Crack in Everything’, Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal, Montreal
2017
‘Hyper Real’, National Gallery Australia, Canberra
‘Christian Dior, Couturier du Rêve’, Musée des Arts Décoratifs, Paris
‘Winckelmann. Modern Antiquity’, The Klassik Stiftung, Weimar
‘Where we are and where we have been’, Kallos Gallery, London
2016
‘Identity Revisited’, The Warehouse, Dallas
‘Daydreaming With Stanley Kubrick‘, Somerset House, London
‘The World Meets Here‘, Custot Gallery, Dubai
‘The Literati Within‘, S/2 Gallery, New York
2015
‘The Würth Collection in Berlin, Museum Würth and Berliner Festspiele
‘Face of Britain‘, National Portrait Gallery, London
‘Beyond Limits 2015‘, Chatsworth House, Derbyshire, UK
2014
‘Art Everywhere’, 30,000 public sites across the UK
‘Open Air’, Yorkshire Sculpture Park, Yorkshire
‘Bad Thoughts’, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam
‘Selected Works from the YAGEO Foundation Collection’, The National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo
‘Leaping the Fence’, Hestercombe House, UK
‘East Wing Biennial Exhibition’, Courtauld Institute, London
2013
‘Beyond Limits, 2013’, Chatsworth House, Derbyshire, UK
‘Louise Vuitton Timeless Muses’, Tokyo Station Hotel, Japan
2012
‘FIAC 2012‘, Jardin des Tuilleries, Paris
‘Fourth Plinth: Contemporary Monument‘, Institute of Contemporary Art, London
‘Marc Quinn & Darren Almond’ Patricia Low Contemporary, St Moritz
2011
‘Surreal versus Surrealism’ in Contemporary Art, IVAM, Valencia
‘Nothing in the World but Youth’ Turner Contemporary, Kent, UK
‘Penelope’s Labour – Weaving words and Images’, Venice, Italy
‘Beyond Limits, 2011’, Chatsworth House, Derbyshire, UK
2010
‘The Visceral Body’, Vancouver Art Gallery, British Columbia
‘Crucible’ Gloucester Cathedral, UK
‘Cream’ Kiasma, Museum of Contemporary Art, Finland
‘The Foundation of Art, Sculpture and its Base since Auguste Rodin, Arp Museum, Germany
‘Beyond Limits, 2010’, Chatsworth House, Derbyshire, UK
‘Realismus: Das Abenteuer der Wirklichkeit (Realism: The Adventure of Reality)’, Kunsthalle Emden, Kuntshalle Rotterdam & Kunsthalle Hypo-Kulturstiftung München
2009
‘The World in the Body’, Mori Art Museum, Tokyo
‘A Tribute to Ron Warren’, Mary Boone Gallery, New York
‘Messiah’, Modem Centre for Modern and Contemporary Arts, Debrecen, Hungary
‘No Visible Means of Escape’, Norwich Castle Museum, United Kingdom
‘Assembling Bodies – Art, Science and Imagination’, Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of Cambridge
‘Fuentes – Non-European Influences on Contemporary Artists’, Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, Paris
‘Innovations in the Third Dimension – Sculpture of Our Time’, Bruce Museum, Greenwich, Connecticut
2008
‘Love’, National Gallery, London
‘Out of Shape – Stylistic Distortions of the Human Form in Art’, The Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center, Poughkeepsie, New York
‘Genesis – Die Kunst der Schopfung’, Zentrum Paul Klee, Bern, Switzerland
‘Statuephilia – Contemporary Sculptors at the British Museum’, British Museum, London
‘Beyond Limits, 2008’, Chatsworth House, Derbyshire, UK
‘Nothing But Sculpture – 8th International Sculpture Biennale’, Carrara, Italy
‘Open XI International Exhibition of Sculptures and Installations’, Venice Lido and San Servolo, Italy
‘Sphinxx’, Stuart Shave/Modern Art, London
2007
‘Garden of Eden’, Kunsthalle Emden, Germany
‘Skin’, The National Museum of Art, Osaka
‘Six Feet Under’, Deutsches Hygiene-Museum, Dresden
‘The Naked Portrait’, Scottish National Gallery, Edinburgh and Compton Verney, Warwickshire, UK
‘Timer 01 – Intimità’, Triennale Bovisa, Milan
‘Genesis – Life at the End of the Information Age’, Centraal Museum, Utrecht, The Netherlands
‘Passion for Art – 35th Anniversary of the Essl Collection’, Essl Museum of ‘Contemporary Art’, Klosterneuburg, Austria
‘Framed: The Art of the Portrait’, Art Gallery of Hamilton, Ontario
2006
‘Aftershock – Contemporary British Art 1990-2006’, Guangdong Museum of Art, Guangzhou, China and Capital Museum, Beijing
‘Six Feet Under – Autopsy of Our Relation to the Dead’, Kunstmuseum Bern, Switzerland
‘Diagnosis (Art) – Contemporary Art Reflecting Medicine’, Kunstmuseum Ahlen and Museum im Kulturspeicher, Wurzburg, Germany
‘Light’, Winchester Cathedral, Hampshire, United Kingdom
‘Eretica’, Museum Sant’Anna, Palermo, Sicily
‘EGOmania – Just When I Think I’ve Understood…’, Galleria Civica di Modena, Italy
2005
‘Imagine a World’, Bargehouse, London
‘Wunderkammer – The Artificial Kingdom’, The Collection, Lincoln, United Kingdom
‘Art Out of Place’, Norwich Castle Museum and Art Gallery, United Kingdom
‘Ripe for Picking Fruits and Flowers’, Jim Kempner Fine Art, New York
‘“Bock mit Inhalt” Summer Exhibition’, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam
‘Summer Exhibition 2005’, Royal Academy of Arts, London
‘London Calling – Y[oung] B[ritish] A[rtists] Criss-Crossed’, Galleri Kaare Berntsen, Oslo
‘Blumenstück – Künstlers Glück’, Museum Morsbroich, Leverkusen, Germany
‘The Body – Art & Science’, National Museum, Stockholm
‘Contemporary Photography and the Garden – Deceits & Fantasies’, The Middlebury College Museum of Art, Vermont; The Parrish Art Museum, New York; Columbia Museum of Art, South Carolina and Tacoma Art Museum, Washington
2004
‘Slimvolume 2004’, Redux, London
‘The Flower as Image – From Monet to Jeff Koons’, Louisiana Museum, Humlebæk, Denmark
‘The Synaesthetics of Art and Public’, Gwangju Biennale, South Korea
‘Lille Expo’, Lille, France
‘Garden of Eden’, Helsinki City Art Museum
‘The Garden of Delights’, Galería Guereta, Madrid
‘Flowers Observed, Flowers Transformed’, The Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh
‘Art of the Garden’, Tate Britain, London; Ulster Museum, Belfast and Manchester Art Gallery
‘Secrets of the ’90s’, Museum voor Moderne Kunst Arnhem, The Netherlands
‘Flowers’, Mary Boone Gallery, New York
‘Ideale e Realtà’, Galleria d’Arte Moderna di Bologna, Italy
2003
‘Fourth Plinth Proposal’, National Gallery, London
‘Fresh – Contemporary British Artists in Print’, Edinburgh Printmakers
‘Statements 7’, 50th Venice Biennale
‘Decembristerne’, Gallery Faurschou, Copenhagen
‘Independence’, South London Gallery, London
‘Genomic Issues’, Graduate Center Art Gallery, New York
‘Bull’s Eye – Works from the Astrup Fearnley Collection’, Arken Museum of Modern Art, Ishøj, Denmark
‘UnNaturally’, Contemporary Art Museum, University of South Florida, Tampa; H & R Block Artspace at the Kansas City Art Institute; Fisher Gallery, University of Southern California, Los Angeles; Copia: The American Center for Wine, Food and the Arts, Napa, California and Lowe Art Museum, University of Miami, Florida
2002
‘Face Off’, Kettle’s Yard, Cambridge
‘The Nude in Twentieth Century Art’, Kunsthalle in Emden, Germany
‘Rapture – Art’s Seduction by Fashion Since 1970’, Barbican Gallery, London
‘Thinking Big – Concepts for 21st Century British Sculpture’, Peggy Guggenheim Collection, Venice
‘The Rowan Collection – Contemporary British and Irish Art’, Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin
‘Life is Beautiful’, Laing Art Gallery, Newcastle
‘In the Freud Museum’, Freud Museum, London
‘Iconoclash – Beyond the Image Wars in Science, Religion and Art’, ZKM Center for Art and Media, Karlsruhe, Germany
‘Second Skin – Historical Life Casting and Contemporary Sculpture’, Henry Moore Institute, Leeds
2001
‘Sacred and Profane’, Mappin Gallery, Sheffield, United Kingdom
‘Printers Inc.’, The Gallery, Stratford-upon-Avon, United Kingdom
The Royal Academy of Arts Charles Wollaston Award, London
‘Summer Exhibition 2001’, Royal Academy of Arts, London
‘Ohne Zögern’, Weserburg Museum of Modern Art, Bremen, Germany
‘Metamorphosis and Cloning’, Foundation for Contemporary Art, Montreal
‘/Arts’, The Lux, London
‘London Nomad’, Beit Zeinab Khatoun, Cairo Biennale
‘Mind the Gap’, Wetterling Gallery, Stockholm
‘Give & Take‘, Victoria and Albert Museum, London
‘Heads and Hands’, Decatur House Museum, Washington
2000
‘Contemporary Art Trail’, Wellcome Wing, The Science Museum, London
‘Spectacular Bodies – The Art and Science of the Human Body from Leonardo to Now’, Hayward Gallery, London
‘Conversation’, Milton Keynes Gallery, United Kingdom
‘Out There’, White Cube, London
‘Psycho’, Anne Faggionato, London
1999
‘Skin’, Deste Foundation, Centre for Contemporary Art, Athens
‘Something Warm and Fuzzy’, Des Moines Art Center, Iowa
‘Into the Light – Photographic Printing out of the Darkroom’, The Royal Photographic Society, Bath, UK
‘Officina Europa’, Galleria d’Arte Moderna di Bologna, Italy
‘Now It’s My Turn to Scream – Works by Contemporary British Artists from the Logan Collection’, Haines Gallery, San Francisco
‘Presence’, Tate Liverpool
‘Spaced Out – Late 1990s Works from the Vicki and Kent Logan Collection’, The CCA Institute, California
‘As Above, So Below – The Body’s Equal Parts’, Fabric Workshop, Philadelphia
‘Physical Evidence’, Kettle’s Yard, Cambridge
1998
‘Family’, Inverleith House, Royal Botanic Garden, Edinburgh
‘Group Exhibition’, Galleri Faurschou, Copenhagen
‘Hope (Sufferance)’, Sun and Doves Gallery, London
‘The Colony Room 50th Anniversary Art Exhibition’, A22 Projects, London
‘A Portrait of Our Times – An Introduction to the Logan Collection’, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art
‘UK Maximum Diversity’, Galerie Krinzinger, Benger Fabrik Bregenz, Austria
‘Sam Taylor-Wood, Tracey Emin, Gillian Wearing and Marc Quinn’, Galerija Dante Marino Cettina, Umag, Croatia
‘Inner Self’, Mitchell-Innes & Nash, New York
1997
‘The Quick and the Dead – Artists and Anatomy’, Royal College of Art, London; Mead Gallery, University of Warwick, United Kingdom and City Art Gallery, Leeds
‘Sensation’, Royal Academy of Arts, London; Hamburger Bahnhof, Berlin and Brooklyn Museum of Art, New York
‘The Body’, The Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney
‘Follow Me’, Kunstverein Kehdingen, Freiburg, Germany
‘A Ilha do Tesouro’, Fundaçao Calouste Gulbenkian, Lisbon
1996
‘Thinking Print – Books to Billboards 1980-95’, Museum of Modern Art, New York
‘Hybrid’, De Appel, Amsterdam
‘Mäßig und gefräßig – Künstlerinstallationen’, MAK Museum für Angewandte Kunst, Vienna
‘Works on Paper’, Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin
‘Happy End’, Kunsthalle Düsseldorf
1995
‘Time Machine’, Musee Egizio, Turin
‘Faith, Hope, Charity’, Kunsthalle Wien, Vienna
‘Contemporary British Art in Print’, Scottish Museum of Modern Art, Edinburgh
‘Ripple Across the Water’, Minato Prefecture and Shibuya Prefecture, Tokyo
1994
‘Life Is Too Much’, Galerie des Archives, Paris
‘Time Machine’, British Museum, London
1993
‘Prospect 93’, Frankfurter Kunstverein and Schirn Kunsthalle, Frankfurt
‘Sonsbeek 93’, Arnhem, The Netherlands
‘Young British Artists from the Saatchi Collection’, Art Cologne
‘Real Real’, Vienna Secession
‘Restaurant’, Galerie Marc Jancou, Paris
‘Young British Artists II’, Saatchi Collection, London
1992
‘The Boundary Rider, 9th Sydney Biennale’, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney
‘London Portfolio’, Karsten Schubert, London
‘Strange Developments’, Anthony d’Offay, London
‘British Art’, Barbara Gladstone Gallery, New York
1991
‘Modern Masters’, Grob Gallery, London
1990
‘Group Show’, Grob Gallery, London
‘Hands’, Grob Gallery, London