The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Artist wins award for doomsday bunkers

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An artist has won a prize worth £10,000 after creating doomsday bunkers inspired by people stockpilin­g food amid fears of a no-deal Brexit.

Gabrielle Gillott, 24, is the winner of the 2020 Glenfiddic­h Residency Award, the largest of its kind for an emerging artist in Scotland.

She built her first bunker for her degree show at Edinburgh College of Art, painting the room and all objects within it a shade of purple called Safe Haven.

Ms Gillott said: “Titles given to interior paint colours act as a springboar­d in my practice.

“Safe Haven drew me into an obsession with the prepping world, first with American doomsday preppers’ bunkers, then that evolved into a fascinatio­n with those prepping for a no-deal Brexit.”

She was chosen from artists taking part in the Royal Scottish Academy New Contempora­ries exhibition, a showcase of students who graduated from Scotland’s five art colleges in 2019.

For the exhibition, which opens to the public today at the RSA Galleries on the Mound in Edinburgh, she created a new three-room bunker installati­on titled Reading Room, Hidey Hole, Secret Room.

Ms Gillott, from Sheffield, will now join artists from around the world for a three-month residency at the Glenfiddic­h Distillery in Dufftown, Moray, in the summer.

The artists are given a house and studio, a monthly stipend of £1,400 each and a £5,800 budget to create new work.

Colin Greenslade, RSA director, said: “The opportunit­y for an emerging artist to join the wider group of internatio­nal practition­ers at Glenfiddic­h is an enormous privilege and honour.

“It has the possibilit­y to catapult an artist’s career into a new internatio­nal network.”

 ??  ?? Artist Gabrielle Gillott won the Glenfiddic­h residency.
Artist Gabrielle Gillott won the Glenfiddic­h residency.

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