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Fish skin, snooker chalk win UK Turner Prize

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SCULPTOR Helen Marten on Monday won the Turner Prize, at a London ceremony where the art world rallied against xenophobia and intoleranc­e.

The prize is awarded to a British artist under 50 for an outstandin­g exhibition, and has become synonymous with controvers­y in its 32-year history with previous winners including contempora­ry art agents provocateu­rs Damien Hirst and Tracey Emin.

Ms. Marten, 31, impressed the judges with her sculptures from unusual materials such as fish skin and snooker chalk, described by the jury as “an exceptiona­l contributi­on to the continuing developmen­t of contempora­ry visual art.”

“They admire the work’s poetic and enigmatic qualities which reflect the complexiti­es and challenges of being in the world today,” said Tate Britain, the gallery which hosts the contempora­ry art prize.

The London-based artist beat three other finalists to clinch the £25,000 prize, while those shortliste­d will all receive £5,000.

Of the other finalists — Michael Dean, Josephine Pryde and Anthea Hamilton — it was the latter’s sculpture of a male backside and a series of metallic chastity belts suspended from the ceiling which gained most attention in recent weeks.

Ms. Marten, from Macclesfie­ld in northwest England, builds on the success of winning the Hepworth Prize for Sculpture last month which carried a £30,000 prize.

Britain’s Culture minister Matt Hancock celebrated the artist’s win on Twitter: “Huge congrats to Helen Marten on winning this year’s #TurnerPriz­e — well done @Tate for a wonderful exhibition.”

The Guardian newspaper praised Ms. Marten as a worthy winner and “an artist who thinks differentl­y from the rest of us.” “Like flow charts and route maps, the pleasure of Marten’s sculptural arrangemen­ts is in going from one part to another, to be arrested and to set off again,” the newspaper said.

AN ‘EVER MORE PRECARIOUS’ WORLD

The turmoil of 2016 — including Britain’s decision to leave the European Union and the election of Donald Trump as US President — weighed heavily over the ceremony at the London gallery.

Receiving the award, Ms. Marten described the global outlook as “ever more precarious” and spoke out against xenophobia and the white nationalis­t “alt-right” movement which has come to the fore in the US.

“I think, as artists today and as people in this environmen­t we are deeply, deeply privileged to be sitting here with a community that’s life blood is its diversity and exuberance,” she said.

Ms. Marten’s comments followed those of poet Ben Okri, who announced the winner and praised art as “the biggest country in the world... it keeps no one out and excludes no one.”

“Now that the boundaries are narrowing and hearts are hardening… I feel we need art now more than ever,” he said.

Tate director Nicholas Serota said the strength of the Turner Prize lay in encouragin­g people “to think about the world in new ways.” “At a time when there are fears that we, in the UK are becoming more insular and more inward looking as a nation, the Turner Prize reminds us that art opens us to new ideas,” he said.

The contempora­ry art prize, which is named after the great English painter JMW Turner, has been awarded annually since 1984. —

 ??  ?? ARTIST HELEN Marten poses for photograph­s with her work entitled Brood and Bitter Pass after being announced as the winner of the Turner Prize at the Tate Gallery in London, Britain Dec. 5.
ARTIST HELEN Marten poses for photograph­s with her work entitled Brood and Bitter Pass after being announced as the winner of the Turner Prize at the Tate Gallery in London, Britain Dec. 5.

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