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17
Mar 2023
Works by a Turner Prize-winning artist will go on display in Harrogate next month as part of a major national collaboration.
The Mercer Art Gallery is working with Tate and National Galleries of Scotland to put on the exhibition of artworks by Martin Creed.
The project is part of Artist Rooms, which brings the work of more than 40 international artists to galleries around the UK.
Mercer Art Gallery curator Karen Southworth said:
Ms Southworth said Creed's work was "deliberately provocative, challenging and playful", adding:
Born in Yorkshire in 1968, Creed rose to fame after winning the Turner Prize in 2001. His most famous installation is perhaps Work No 227 The Lights Going On and Off, an empty room in which the lights were switched on and off at five-second intervals.
He was also commissioned to mark the opening of the 2012 London Olympics with Work No 1197 All The Bells in the Country Ringing as Quickly and Loudly as Possible for Three Minutes. It saw bells across the country, from Big Ben to bicycle bells, being rung simultaneously.
Creed's Work No 370 Balls, from 2004, will feature in Harrogate. It will see almost 1,000 balls of different scales, weights and textures filling the main gallery.
Visitors will also be able to see Creed's Work No 890 Don't Worry and Work No 1340, a large-scale wall painting of diagonal stripes.
It is the first time the artworks will be exhibited in North Yorkshire, as well as the first time Balls has been shown outside London and Edinburgh.
The exhibition will run from April 1 to July 2 and admission is free.
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