Description
Artrage! tells the raucous story of the YBAs, chronicling the group's rise to prominence from the landmark show 'Freeze' curated by Damien Hirst, through their 1990s heyday and the notorious 'Sensation' exhibition, to the Momart fire of 2004 that seemed to symbolize the group's fading from centre stage. The book ends with an update on the artists' careers and fortunes. Drawing on interviews with all the key BritArt players and extensive archival research, Elizabeth Fullerton examines the individual characters, their relationships to one another, crucial events and seminal artworks, considering, too, the political, economic and artistic context of those years. Plentiful quotations bring out the distinctive personalities and provide fresh insights into the people and the period. Among the artists discussed are Damien Hirst, Rachel Whiteread, Tracey Emin, Jake and Dinos Chapman, Sarah Lucas and Gary Hume.
With 29 illustrations
The definitive history of the Young British Artists movement
About the Author
Elizabeth Fullerton is an art historian with over twenty-five years' experience as a journalist writing on art, culture, news and politics in Europe, the Middle East and Central America. Her articles have appeared in many international publications, including the Financial Times, the Independent, the Washington Post, the Sydney Herald and ARTnews.
Reviews
'Back in the early 1990s, the British art world changed forever thanks to a band of bright young things who weren't afraid of controversy ... 'Artrage!' details that blistering scene and looks at its place today' - It's Nice That
'Well-illustrated, studiously researched' - Daily Telegraph
'An excellent primer on the rise and fall, successes and failures of a moment in British art. It catches the brio of the people involved, charts the connections that they forged; the friendships, the fall-outs, the partner swapping ... and celebrates the art they created' - The Herald
'Mess-making is the subject of Elizabeth's Fullerton's riotous Artrage!: The Story of the BRITART Revolution, which documents the antics of the upstart provocateurs who aimed, as the Chapman brothers declared, to unsettle civilisation and mock the notion that art has a moral purpose' - Peter Conrad, Observer
'Her account of the rise and rise of the now not-so-young British artists is a well-written as well as a necessary book. Students, researchers and curators looking back in years to come will be grateful for a publication that goes beyond cheering and sneering to document that period of British art history, and document it well' - Farah Nayeri, Culture Writer for New York Times in London
'A sober account of an intoxicating time, but it is well researched and very readable ...There is no escaping the fact that it has been the best 25 years in the history of British art' - Art Quarterly
'A vibrant account of how Hirst, Lucas, the Chapmans et al came to noisy prominence' - RA Magazine
'Fullerton writes about contemporary art in an engaging, exciting and insightful way. The Young British Artists could not have asked for a better biographer' - Ed Voves, Art Eyewitness
'Fullerton is a former Reuters foreign correspondent and hasn't forgotten how to tell a story. Her book is blessedly jargon-free and it does offer a clear account of the sequence of events that made up the YBA phenomenon' - Jackdaw
Book Information
ISBN 9780500296332
Author Elizabeth Fullerton
Format Paperback
Page Count 224
Imprint Thames & Hudson Ltd
Publisher Thames & Hudson Ltd
Weight(grams) 240g