London's
Tate Gallery
awarded this year's prestigious Turner art prize to 33-year-old Martin
Creed for an installation consisting of an empty room with lights that
turn on and off every five seconds. In a joint statement, the prize
judges said: "The lights going on and off add qualities of strength,
rigor, wit and sensitivity to the site." Simon Wilson, the gallery's
communications curator, called the piece "pure and spiritual,"
adding that Creed "is a very pure extreme kind of artist. The fact
that many people find his work so baffling indicates that he's working
on the edge."
Asked why the lights flicker, Creed explained: "It activates the
whole of the space it occupies without anything physically being added
and I like that because in a way it's a really big work with nothing
being there... It's like, if I can't decide whether to have the
lights on or off, then I have them both on and off and I feel better
about it."
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