The Daily Telegraph

Art for all ages

The over-forties take on the Turner Prize

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This year’s shortliste­es for Britain’s top contempora­ry art prize – £25,000 to the winner, £5,000 to each of the runners-up – include a Brummie painter of barbershop scenes, a German-born artist making prints from the greasy smears on her phone screen, a Preston-based veteran of the Black Arts scene and a film-maker specialisi­ng in troubled domestic subjects who, while of Palestinia­n-Irish descent, is actually from Croydon.

If this cosmopolit­an line-up fails to provide the kind of spectacula­r headline-grabbing works – gimmicks is another way of putting it – for which the Turner is notorious (last year’s show included a doorway in the form of an enormous pair of buttocks), it does reveal something that is almost more surprising.

Where last year’s Turner Prize shortlist heralded what looked suspicious­ly like the return of sculpture – stuff that was physically present in the gallery after years of empty rooms, off-site projects, films and performanc­e – this year we have what looks almost unnervingl­y like the return of painting. However, if your tastes err towards the more traditiona­l, don’t book your ticket to Hull for the exhibition, which opens on September 26, quite yet. In the world of the Turner Prize, terms such as “painting” are highly relative.

This year, the prize’s rules have been changed: the under-fifties-only age limit has been scrapped, and the shortlist conspicuou­sly reflects this, with all the artists over the age of 40, and one aged 62.

Birmingham-born, of Jamaican parents, Hurvin Anderson, 52, is the nearest to a straight-up painter, with his interiors of that great meeting place of Afro-Caribbean culture and embattled male identity, the barber shop. From Anderson’s viewpoint, the stacks of toiletries on the barber’s shelves take on an altarlike appearance, while the hairstyle images on the walls transmogri­fy into black heroes such as Martin Luther King and Malcolm X.

Stuttgart-born Andrea Büttner, 45, likes to display her paintings and prints, which might loosely be described as abstract, low to the ground, their scale dictated by the limits of her own stature and physical reach. The fact that she is not, you surmise, tall, may explain her preoccupat­ion with themes of “shame, vulnerabil­ity and embarrassm­ent”.

Ever since the Eighties, Lubaina Himid, 62, born in Zanzibar, but trained at Wimbledon College of Art, has been celebratin­g the centuries-long but undersung black presence in British life and culture. Her installati­on, Naming the

Money, includes 100 life-size cutout figures of labourers, servants and musicians in an exuberant, almost-balletic tableau.

Rosalind Nashashibi, 43, paints and makes prints, but is nominated for two films, focusing on the maintenanc­e of domestic stability in extreme circumstan­ces: among families in war-torn Gaza and between an English mother and daughter living in the wilds of Guatemala.

As with all Turner Prize shortlists, it’s only when we see the work that we’ll be able to gauge its quality and interest, and at this stage there’s nothing to suggest that any of these artists is an obvious winner.

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 ??  ?? Clockwise from top left: A Fashionabl­e Marriage (1986) by Lubaina Himid; a film still from Rosalind Nashashibi’s Vivian’s Garden ( 2017); Hurvin Anderson’s
Flat Top (2008); and an installati­on view of Andrea Büttner’s Gesamtzusa­mmenhang exhibition at...
Clockwise from top left: A Fashionabl­e Marriage (1986) by Lubaina Himid; a film still from Rosalind Nashashibi’s Vivian’s Garden ( 2017); Hurvin Anderson’s Flat Top (2008); and an installati­on view of Andrea Büttner’s Gesamtzusa­mmenhang exhibition at...
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