Ryan Gander
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Ryan Gander (born 1976) is a British artist. Since 2003, Gander has produced a body of artworks in different forms, ranging from sculpture, apparel, writing, architecture, painting, typefaces, publications, and performance. Additionally, Gander curates exhibitions, has worked as an educator at art institutions and universities, and has written and presented television programmes on and about contemporary art and culture for the
BBC The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) is a British public service broadcaster headquartered at Broadcasting House in London, England. Originally established in 1922 as the British Broadcasting Company, it evolved into its current sta ...
. Gander is typically described as a conceptual artist, but this is a term he has refuted, referring instead to himself as "a sort of neo-conceptualist, Proper-'Gander'-ist, amateur philosopher". He was elected Royal Academician in the category of sculpture. Gander's work has been displayed in several countries.


Early life and education

Gander was born in 1976 in
Chester Chester is a cathedral city in Cheshire, England, on the River Dee, Wales, River Dee, close to the England–Wales border. With a built-up area population of 92,760 in 2021, it is the most populous settlement in the borough of Cheshire West an ...
, northwest England. His father worked as a planning engineer on the commercial gearbox line at
Vauxhall Motors Vauxhall Motors Limited , ;Company No. 00135767. Incorporated 12 May 1914, name changed from Vauxhall Motors Limited to General Motors UK Limited on 16 April 2008, reverted to Vauxhall Motors Limited on 18 September 2017. is a British Automoti ...
in Ellesmere Port, Liverpool (a fact about which he would later make work). Gander's mother worked initially as a teacher and then as an inspector for
Her Majesty's Inspectorate of Education Her Majesty's Inspectorate of Education (HMIe) was an executive agency of the Scottish Government, responsible for the inspection of public and private, primary and secondary schools, as well as further education colleges, community learni ...
. Gander became interested in art after being taken to one of the early
British Art Show The British Art Show (BAS) is a major survey exhibition organised every five years to showcase contemporary British Art. Each time it is organised, the show tours to four UK cities. It usually requires a number of venues in each city to accommo ...
s by his father. In 1996, Gander began studying Interactive Arts at
Manchester Metropolitan University Manchester Metropolitan University is located in the centre of Manchester, England. The university has 40,000 students and over 4,000 members of staff. It is home to four faculties (Arts and Humanities, Business and Law, Health and Education ...
, graduating in 1999, and holds an honorary Doctor of the Arts. After graduating from art school, he worked in a carpet shop in Chester for a while, before leaving to study in the Netherlands. Between 1999 and 2000, he studied as a 'Fine Art Research Participant' at the Jan van Eyck Akademie in Maastricht, Netherlands. From 2001-2002, he participated in the artist residency programme of the
Rijksakademie van Beeldende Kunsten The Rijksakademie van beeldende kunsten (State Academy of Fine Arts) was founded in 1870 in Amsterdam. It is a classical academy, a place where philosophers, academics and artists meet to test and exchange ideas and knowledge. The school supports ...
in Amsterdam. In 2004, he was made Cocheme Fellow at
Byam Shaw School of Art The Byam Shaw School of Art, often known simply as Byam Shaw, was an independent art school in London, England, which specialised in fine art and offered foundation and degree level courses. It was founded in 1910 by Byam Shaw, John Liston Bya ...
, London. It was winning the 2005
Baloise Art Prize The Baloise Art Prize is a prize awarded to two people each year at "Art Statements" sector of the international Art Basel fair. The prize is awarded by the Bâloise group (insurance and banking), a company that works to promote contemporary, eme ...
at
Art Basel Art Basel is a for-profit, privately owned and managed, international art fair staged annually in Basel (Switzerland), Miami Beach (US), Hong Kong and Paris. Art Basel provides a platform for galleries to show and sell their work to buyers, an ...
for the presentation of his video work ''Is this Guilt in You Too (The Study of a Car in a Field)'' that launched Gander's career as an artist, winning a cash prize of CHF 30,000 (Swiss francs).


Work

Ryan Gander's body of work is vast, varied and diverse. His work is not invested in any single medium or style, he has cultivated a "non-style" that enables him to pursue ideas across many traditionally understood artistic media. However, across this work there are preoccupations that Gander returns to: legacies of modernist design,
aesthetic value Aesthetics (also spelled esthetics) is the branch of philosophy concerned with the nature of beauty and taste, which in a broad sense incorporates the philosophy of art.Slater, B. H.Aesthetics ''Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy,'' , acces ...
, creativity and education, para-possible and fictional (
utopian A utopia ( ) typically describes an imagined community or society that possesses highly desirable or near-perfect qualities for its members. It was coined by Sir Thomas More for his 1516 book ''Utopia'', which describes a fictional island soci ...
and
dystopian A dystopia (lit. "bad place") is an imagined world or society in which people lead wretched, dehumanized, fearful lives. It is an imagined place (possibly state) in which everything is unpleasant or bad, typically a totalitarian or environmenta ...
) worlds, and the relationship between art and design. This approach is exemplified in his major commission with
Artangel Artangel is a London-based arts organisation founded in 1985 by Roger Took. Directed since 1991 by James Lingwood and Michael Morris, it has commissioned and produced a string of notable site-specific works, plus several projects for TV, film, r ...
titled ''Locked Room Scenario'' (2011), in which the visitor enters a totally designed office space in a former trading depot where they are invited to solve the mystery of a group show of fictionalised artists, including their work, to which they are denied access. The work ''It Came out of Nowhere, he said staring at an empty space'' (2012) is a
Comme des Garçons Comme des Garçons (CDG, ) is a Japanese fashion label, founded by Rei Kawakubo in 1969. It is based in Paris, where its flagship store is located. Other than fashion, the label has expanded to include jewelry and perfume (under the brand Comme ...
document wallet made collaboratively with the artist
Jonathan Monk Jonathan Monk (born 1969, in Leicester, UK) is an artist living and working in Berlin. Life and career Art practice Monk questions the meaning of art using conceptualism in a way that Ken Johnson in ''The New York Times ''The New ...
. His series of works titled ''Device #5'' (2005) might be functional devices but actually are not. His installation at
dOCUMENTA Documenta (often stylized documenta) is an Art exhibition, exhibition of contemporary art which takes place every five years in Kassel, Germany. Documenta was founded by artist, teacher and curator Arnold Bode in 1955 as part of the Bundesgarte ...
(13) titled ''I need some meaning I can memorise (The Invisible Pull)'' (2012), presented an empty room with a light breeze circulating. In 2015, Gander erected "The artist's second phone", a giant billboard installed outside Lisson Gallery, London, which borrows the aesthetic of vacant Mexican billboards to announce his phone number to all passing. The series of works "A lamp made by the artist for his wife" (2013) are ad hoc combinations of products available from most hardware stores to produce a functioning item of furniture. Recently, Gander has increasingly used vending machines to distribute works. Also in 2015, Gander presented
Earnest Hawker
' (2015), his work in which a performer took on the persona of the artist, at the Performa Biennial. At frieze art fair 2019 ''Time Well Spent'' (2019) dispensed pebbles for £500 a piece.


Collision and association

Gander's fascination with techniques of creative and associative collisions is evident in his earliest 'Loose Association' public lecturers, begun in 2002, and published together in 2007 as the book ''Loose Associations and Other Lectures''. These lectures range across material, from meditations on the film ''
Back to the Future ''Back to the Future'' is a 1985 American science fiction film directed by Robert Zemeckis and written by Zemeckis and Bob Gale. It stars Michael J. Fox, Christopher Lloyd, Lea Thompson, Crispin Glover, and Thomas F. Wilson. Set in 1985 ...
'' to the writing of
Italo Calvino Italo Calvino (, ; ;. RAI (circa 1970), retrieved 25 October 2012. 15 October 1923 – 19 September 1985) was an Italian novelist and short story writer. His best-known works include the ''Our Ancestors'' trilogy (1952–1959), the '' Cosm ...
, modernism to children's books. Motifs of association and collision are evident across his works and he has explored techniques of association used by earlier modernist artists and architects, notably
Luis Barragán Luis Ramiro Barragán Morfín (March 9, 1902 – November 22, 1988) was a Mexican architect and engineer. His work has influenced contemporary architects visually and conceptually. Barragán's buildings are frequently visited by international ...
and Ernö Goldfinger. With the sculptural series ''The Way Things Collide'' (2012–ongoing), Gander collides two elements that are hardest to be associated logically with the human mind, each is a game, a challenge, with narrative consequences. A knotted condom is left on a USM cabinet; a skate wing rests on a suitcase; a macaroon balances on a stool. These are experiments in minimum constituents of narrative.


Creativity

Gander believes that everyone makes creative decisions in their daily life and can be a creative artist. These everyday acts of creativity, he argues, are often more exciting than the creative artworks of celebrated contemporary artists, whose repetition of a successful formula is contrary to creativity. Art for Gander is about "trying to make some original contribution to human history and knowledge, like an explorer". To avoid habitualised ways of working, Gander has looked to children's creativity, frequently collaborating with his daughters to realise artworks. Likewise, since the early 2000s he has used an array of pseudonyms to produce work outside of his typical concerns. These fictional characters spread across an increasingly growing web of citation and cross-reference, self-corroborating and self-sustaining fictional and possible historical events. In 2014, Gander told an interviewer that: 'I hope my work is ..expansive or "multiplicit" (that is not a word but it should be). An objective is that the work has more end points than starting points – like a 1970s children's 'Choose your own adventure story''. An influential book Gander has referred to in several interviews is Edward Packer's ''
Choose Your Own Adventure ''Choose Your Own Adventure'' is a series of children's gamebooks where each story is written from a second-person point of view, with the reader assuming the role of the protagonist and making choices that determine the main character's actio ...
'' books, first published in 1976, and marketed to 10 to 14 year olds. In these books the reader begins at page one, follows instructions at the foot of the page to turn to page two, from where instructions at the foot of that page motivates a decision that splits the narrative.


Disability-related works

Gander is a wheelchair user with a long-term physical disability, a severe brittle bone condition which hospitalised him for long periods of time as a child. In 2006, his installation at the old Whitechapel Library, Is this Guilt in you too?, where he filled the space with obstacles, detritus, dead ends, and illusions meant to confound visitors and symbolize the inequitable difficulties faced by disabled people, was part of the
Arts Council England Arts Council England is an arm's length non-departmental public body of the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, Department for Culture, Media and Sport. It is also a registered charity. It was formed in 1994 when the Arts Council o ...
's Adjustments exhibitions whose aim was "to address transitional thinking on disability, equality and inclusion". His work for the 2011
Venice Biennale The Venice Biennale ( ; ) is an international cultural exhibition hosted annually in Venice, Italy. There are two main components of the festival, known as the Art Biennale () and the Venice Biennale of Architecture, Architecture Biennale (), ...
exhibition featured an action-figure sized sculpture that represents him while he falls from a wheelchair. Despite various interviews and works made in which Gander explicitly states he does not understand himself to be disabled or "differently abled" to anyone else, his work is interpreted, often by able-bodied commentators, as that of a disabled artist. The curator
Matthew Higgs Matthew Higgs (born 1964) is an English artist, curator, writer and publisher. His contribution to UK contemporary art has included the creation of ''Imprint 93'', a series of artists’ editions featuring the work of artists such as Martin Cree ...
, for example, has argued that his disability contributes to his unique way of seeing: "The first thing I ever noticed about Ryan was that he uses a wheelchair. I mention this not in passing, nor as a gratuitous aside. Whilst I accept that some people might argue that this information is irrelevant, I would like to think that the fact that Ryan uses a wheelchair does – at least – have some bearing on my subsequent understanding of his work." In recent years, Gander has felt compelled to address his disability in order to correct other people's perception of his exceptionalism as a wheelchair user. In the
BBC The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) is a British public service broadcaster headquartered at Broadcasting House in London, England. Originally established in 1922 as the British Broadcasting Company, it evolved into its current sta ...
television programme ''Me, My Selfie and I with Ryan Gander'', broadcast in 2019, Gander met a
transhumanist Transhumanism is a philosophical and intellectual movement that advocates the human enhancement, enhancement of the human condition by developing and making widely available new and future technologies that can greatly enhance longevity, cogni ...
who suggests that him he might be "improved" too by replacing his legs with bionic ones modelled on cheetahs. Gander replies: "Being in a wheelchair doesn't affect my view on the world. In an age where everyone identifies with being different, I am someone who actually can't walk and don't associate with being disabled. I don't tick the
Arts Council An arts council is a government or private non-profit organization dedicated to promoting the arts; mainly by funding local artists, awarding prizes, and organizing arts events. They often operate at arms-length from the government to prevent pol ...
funding box that says 'disabled' because I don't identify ... I don't want cheetah legs. I don't know any cheetahs." In his work ''The End'' (2020) an animatronic mouse poking its head through a gallery wall it's burrowed through elaborates further on the capturing of difference, voicing the opinion of the artist:


Public sculpture

In 2010, Gander's sculpture ''The Happy Prince'' was commissioned by the
Public Art Fund Public Art Fund is an independent, non-profit arts organization founded in 1977 by Doris C. Freedman. The organization presents contemporary art in New York City's public spaces through a series of highly visible artists' projects, new commissions ...
for Central Park, New York City. This concrete resin sculpture presented the ruin of the fictional statue from the final chapter in
Oscar Wilde Oscar Fingal O'Fflahertie Wills Wilde (16 October 185430 November 1900) was an Irish author, poet, and playwright. After writing in different literary styles throughout the 1880s, he became one of the most popular and influential playwright ...
's children's book '' The Happy Prince'' (1888). In 2012, Gander was commissioned to produce ''Escape hatch to Culturefield'', situated within a wooded area of the Karlslaue Park, Kassel, Delaware, as part of
dOCUMENTA Documenta (often stylized documenta) is an Art exhibition, exhibition of contemporary art which takes place every five years in Kassel, Germany. Documenta was founded by artist, teacher and curator Arnold Bode in 1955 as part of the Bundesgarte ...
13. Off the park's designated paths, a trapdoor fabricated from iron and concrete appeared to lead to an underground series of tunnels of some kind. The hatch, visibly partially open so that the spectator might partially peer inside, showed ladder rungs leading down. The same year, 2012, Gander's created ''It's got such good heart in it'' was commissioned by Mexico City Zoo, and located in the 'activity centre' for lions. Based on
Sol LeWitt Solomon "Sol" LeWitt (September 9, 1928 – April 8, 2007) was an American artist linked to various movements, including conceptual art and minimalism. LeWitt came to fame in the late 1960s with his wall drawings and "structures" (a term he pref ...
's open cube structure, and the story that LeWitt allowed his cats to use his redundant sculpture, upscaled and added to, it was offered as a climbing frame and scratching post for lions. In 2018, Gander produced two public artworks, the first sited outside
BALTIC Baltic may refer to: Peoples and languages *Baltic languages, a subfamily of Indo-European languages, including Lithuanian, Latvian and extinct Old Prussian *Balts (or Baltic peoples), ethnic groups speaking the Baltic languages and/or originatin ...
gallery, Newcastle, titled ''To Give Light (Northern Aspirational Charms)''. Ten minimal, simplified forms based on ten objects originally designed to emit or shine light were cast in black concrete and arranged chronologically in a circular configuration. Each element featured three links of mooring chain attached, implying a nautical functionality as well as alluding to trinkets on an oversized charm bracelet. Later in 2018, outside The Metropolitan Cathedral of Christ the King, Liverpool as part of the
Liverpool Biennial Liverpool Biennial is the largest international contemporary art festival in the United Kingdom. Since its launch in 1998, Liverpool Biennial has commissioned over 380 new artworks and presented work by over 530 artists from around the world. ...
. his work titled ''Time Moves Quickly'', consisted of five public artworks, functional as benches, placed in a circle in the public square outside the cathedral. Each artwork was enlarged and reproduced from a maquette made by a child from Knotty Ash Primary using building blocks that, when rearranged, made a model of the cathedral. In 2019, Gander was commissioned to produce a public sculpture by
Cambridge Biomedical Campus The Cambridge Biomedical Campus is the largest centre of medical research and health science in Europe. The site is located at the southern end of Hills Road in Cambridge, England. Over 20,000 people work at the site, which is home to Cambrid ...
. Titled ''The Green & The Gardens'', Gander led a concept that transformed the space into a green heart of the campus, a shared place for everyone. In collaboration with Gillespies, landscape architects, they developed the design, selected the planting, furniture and lighting. Gander integrated sculptural elements: coloured tents that glow at night, an open gateway, a stile, and a community noticeboard. Gander's 2022 sculpture titled ''We are only human (Incomplete sculpture for Scraborough to be finished by snow)'' was created in the shape of a
dolos A dolos (plural: dolosse) is a wave-dissipating concrete block used in great numbers as a form of coastal management. It is a type of tetrapod. Weighing up to , dolosse are used to build revetments for protection against the erosive force of w ...
using a computer program to simulate snowfall. By subtracting the volume of snow from the sculpture's original shape, Gander created an artwork that would only be ‘finished’ when it snows, pointing to weather changes caused by global warming. The sculpture was cast in ultra-low carbon concrete and incorporated limestone formed from shells and skeletons of prehistoric sea creatures. The piece will be based at
Scarborough Castle Scarborough Castle is a former Medieval Period, medieval royal fortress situated on a rocky promontory overlooking the North Sea and Scarborough, North Yorkshire, Scarborough, North Yorkshire, England. The site of the castle, encompassing the Ir ...
for 10 years through 2032, a period that scientists indicate as being "crucial in reducing carbon emissions before global warming hits a tipping point and becomes irreversible." Later that year, Ryan worked with the National Glass Center to produce ''Ghost Shop'', a site specific life-sized replica of an abandoned betting shop sited in a vacant shop in Sunderland City Centre entirely made of glass with no visible fixtures and fittings. Laying within the space was banned furniture and detritus including carpet tiles, shop fittings, wall fixtures, upturned bins, fire extinguishers, discarded betting slips and a pile of unopened mail. In 2023, Ryan was chosen by
Manchester International Festival The Manchester International Festival is a biennial international arts festival, with a specific focus on original new work, held in the English city of Manchester and run by Factory International. The festival is a biennial event, first takin ...
to produce a city-wide happening across the summer. Hundreds of thousands of coins consisting of three designs, were freely distributed in a public context to be found or discovered at free will by the entire population of a city or region. The coins had been designed to act both as lucky charms, to remind the finder of the value of time and attention as opposed to solely money, but also to act as a decision making tool that can be utilised to assist with choice and spontaneity. The three coins are based on three themes: Pause and Action, Together and Solo, as well as Speak and Listen. In addition, the coins carry mottos within their designs, such as ‘Time is your greatest asset’ and ‘Let the world take a turn’, both of which are often repeated by the artist's father, highlighting the dichotomy and value between doing and not doing, a true exercise in agency and change. In 2024, Ryan unveiled six life-sized bronze sculptures at Elephant Park (
Elephant and Castle Elephant and Castle is an area of South London, England, in the London Borough of Southwark. The name also informally refers to much of Walworth and Newington, due to the proximity of the London Underground station of the same name. The n ...
, London) created in collaboration with
South London Gallery The South London Gallery, founded 1891, is a public-funded gallery of contemporary art in Camberwell, London. Until 1992, it was known as the South London Art Gallery, and nowadays the acronym SLG is often used. Margot Heller became its direct ...
, year 4 school pupils, and the
Contemporary Art Society The Contemporary Art Society (CAS) is an independent charity that champions the collecting of outstanding contemporary art and craft for UK museum collections. Since its founding in 1910 the organisation has donated over 10,000 works to museum ...
. The artist's first permanent piece of public art in London was created through a series of workshops with children from three local primary schools, with the works now available to view in the two-acre park in Elephant & Castle. During the workshops, led by Gander and the South London Gallery education team, the children explored possibilities for their futures together, and engaged in place-making activities relevant to their personal, local, and global contexts. The project’s aim was to create positive stories for young people and help them reflect on the diversity and vibrancy of their own communities and future. Other public artworks include: ''Things just happened to him'' (2024) Zoo Atlanta, Grant Park, Atlanta, Georgia, USA; ''Our Long Dotted Line (or 37 years previous)'' (2021) at Space K, Korea; ''The day to day accumulation of hope, failure and ecstasy – The zenith of your career (The Last Degas)'' (2017), exhibited in the gardens of The Contemporary Austin Commission (USA), in late Autumn, 2018; ''Because editorial is costly'' (2016), a giant, swollen, mirror-finish stainless steel version of "Rapport de volumes" (1919) by
Georges Vantongerloo Georges Vantongerloo (24 November 1886, Antwerp – 5 October 1965, Paris) was a Belgian sculptor, painter, designer of furniture and buildings, and founding member of the De Stijl group. Life From 1905 to 1909 Vantongerloo studied Fine Art at th ...
in a crater as if crash landed exhibited during the Okayama Art Summit (JP); ''Dad's Halo Effect'' (2014), three polished stainless steel sculptures initially conceived by the artist's father when he worked at General Motors in the 1980s, and based on parts of the steering mechanism of a commercial
Bedford Bedford is a market town in Bedfordshire, England. At the 2011 Census, the population was 106,940. Bedford is the county town of Bedfordshire and seat of the Borough of Bedford local government district. Bedford was founded at a ford (crossin ...
truck, re-imagined by the artist from his father's verbal description; ''No political motivation'' (2011), a faithful reproduction of the revolving New Scotland Yard sign constructed to display the words 'THE WORLD S FAIR', incorrectly typeset with a half space between the characters 'D' and 'S' – meaning the sign could be interpreted in one of two differing ways, as an advertisement for an event or as a political slogan.


Curatorial

Gander has curated, by himself and in collaboration, numerous exhibitions, including, notably, "The way in which it landed" at
Tate Britain Tate Britain, known from 1897 to 1932 as the National Gallery of British Art and from 1932 to 2000 as the Tate Gallery, is an art museum on Millbank in the City of Westminster in London, England. It is part of the Tate network of galleries in En ...
, London, UK in 2008, featuring Lucy Clout,
Nathaniel Mellors Nathaniel Mellors (born December 1974, Doncaster, Yorkshire, England)Carol Bove Carol Bove (born 1971) is an American artist based in New York City. She lives and works in Brooklyn. Early life and education Born in 1971 in Geneva, Switzerland to American parents, Bove (pronounced bo-VAY) was raised in Berkeley, California, ...
; 'Young British Art' at Limoncello, London, UK in 2011 featuring 70 emerging artist; "Night in the Museum" to celebrate the 70th anniversary of the Arts Council collection, which toured to The Attenborough Centre, Leicester, UK, Longside Gallery,
Yorkshire Sculpture Park The Yorkshire Sculpture Park (YSP) is an art gallery, with both open-air and indoor exhibition spaces, in West Bretton, Wakefield, in West Yorkshire, England. It shows work by British and international artists, including Henry Moore and Barb ...
, Yorkshire, UK, and Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery, Birmingham, UK; 'The Greatest Story Ever Told', The National Museum of Art Osaka, Osaka, JP in 2017; ''Knock Knock'' at
South London Gallery The South London Gallery, founded 1891, is a public-funded gallery of contemporary art in Camberwell, London. Until 1992, it was known as the South London Art Gallery, and nowadays the acronym SLG is often used. Margot Heller became its direct ...
, London, UK, 2018. "The Annotated Reader", a publication and exhibition, curated with art critic Jonathan P. Watts, is touring the world. In 2016, Gander also collaborated with Watts on "general studies" at OUTPOST, Norwich, a "service" that offered artist-designed
Airbnb Airbnb, Inc. ( , an abbreviation of its original name, "Air Bed and Breakfast") is an American company operating an online marketplace for short-and-long-term homestays, experiences and services in various countries and regions. It acts as a ...
rooms available to rent cheaply during the
British Art Show The British Art Show (BAS) is a major survey exhibition organised every five years to showcase contemporary British Art. Each time it is organised, the show tours to four UK cities. It usually requires a number of venues in each city to accommo ...
. In 2020, Gander founded Solid Haus, a new Kunsthalle-like contemporary art space situated in rural Suffolk, two hours east of London. Situated within his studio complex, Solid Haus made positive use of an era of lockdown with an intention of hosting impromptu projects by both emerging and established artists. In September 2023, Gander was invited to curate the inaugural Chester Contemporary, an ambitious international cultural event that makes and shows relevant, distinctive, contemporary art alongside a programme of events that respond to the city's unique places and spaces, its history and its characters. Chester Contemporary features work by acclaimed UK artists and supports emerging artists at a pivotal point in their career to make new and ambitious projects. The programme included
John Akomfrah Sir John Akomfrah (born 4 May 1957) is a Ghanaian-born British artist, writer, film director, screenwriter, theorist and curator of Ghanaian descent, whose "commitment to a radicalism both of politics and of cinematic form finds expression in ...
,
Fiona Banner Fiona Banner (born 1966), also known as The Vanity Press, is a British artist. Her work encompasses sculpture, drawing, installation and text, and demonstrates a long-standing fascination with the emblem of fighter aircraft and their role within cu ...
,
Simeon Barclay Simeon Barclay (born 1975) is a British multi-media artist. Born in Huddersfield, he studied at Leeds Metropolitan University, and Goldsmiths, University of London, Goldsmiths College in London. Barclay's work includes mediums such as live perform ...
, and
Peter Fischli & David Weiss Peter Fischli (born 8 June 1952) and David Weiss (21 June 1946 – 27 April 2012), often shortened to Fischli/Weiss, were a Swiss artist duo that collaborated since 1979. Their best-known work is the film ''Der Lauf der Dinge'' (''The Way Things ...
. Other notable shows include: ‘A Video Show’, Solid Haus, Woodbridge, UK (2024); Chester Contemporary, Chester, UK (2023); ‘EVERYTHING BROKEN DOWN’, Solid Haus, Woodbridge, UK (2023); ‘All our stories are incomplete… Colours of the imagination’, Tokyo Opera City Art Gallery, Tokyo, JP (2022); ‘The Annotated Reader’, Melbourne Art Book Fair, Melbourne, AU; ‘The Annotated Reader’, KRIEG, Hasselt, BE (2021); ‘The Annotated Reader’, Castlefield Gallery, Manchester, UK (2021); ‘Flat Work’, Solid Haus, Woodbridge, UK (2021); ‘All our stories are incomplete… Colours of the imagination’, Tokyo Opera City Art Gallery, Tokyo, JP (2021); ‘Faces of Picasso: The collection selected by Ryan Gander’, Remai Modern Picasso (2017)


Television

Gander first made an appearance on BBC Two in 2014 on an episode of ''The Culture Show'' in episode "The Art of Everything", presented by
Miranda Sawyer Miranda Caroline Sawyer (born 7 January 1967) is an English author, journalist and broadcaster. Education and early life Sawyer was born in Bristol and grew up in Wilmslow, Cheshire with her brother Toby, who is an actor. Sawyer was educated ...
, explored the extraordinary diversity of Gander's art, spanning sculptures that brushed with art history, chess sets made from car components, creative cocktails and designer trainers. In 2016, BBC Two broadcast ''Ryan Gander: Living is a Creative Act''. In 2017, Gander appeared on Sky Arts' ''The Art Show''. That same year BBC Four presented ''Ryan Gander: The Idea of Japan'', taking him 6000 miles east of his Suffolk studio, to investigate how Japanese visual culture is closely linked to a special relationship with time. This was followed in 2019 by ''Me, My Selfie and I with Ryan Gander'', which investigated the new phenomenon of the selfie. The programme was praised by ''
The Guardian ''The Guardian'' is a British daily newspaper. It was founded in Manchester in 1821 as ''The Manchester Guardian'' and changed its name in 1959, followed by a move to London. Along with its sister paper, ''The Guardian Weekly'', ''The Guardi ...
s Eleanor Morgan noting that "Gander's lines of questioning make for compelling viewing."


Teaching

Gander was Professor of Visual Art at the
University of Huddersfield The University of Huddersfield is a public research university located in Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, England. It has been a University since 1992, but has its origins in a series of institutions dating back to the 19th century. It has made te ...
, and at
University of Suffolk The University of Suffolk is a public university situated in Suffolk and Norfolk, England. The university was established in 2007 as University Campus Suffolk (UCS), founded as a collaboration between the University of East Anglia and the Unive ...
.


Fairfield project

In 2013, Gander and creative consultant Simon Turnbull proposed plans to open Fairfield International, a residential art school in a former primary school in
Saxmundham Saxmundham ( ) is a market town and civil parish in the East Suffolk district, in the county of Suffolk, England. It is set in the valley of the River Fromus about north-east of Ipswich and west of the coast at Sizewell. The town is bypassed ...
, Suffolk. Modelled on a hybrid of the Dutch academy and artist residency, Fairfield International would provide six residencies a year to hard-up artists in need of a retreat. however, despite raising funds, the project was cancelled in 2015 due to a combination of factors, chiefly the bureaucracy of dealing with the county council over the purchase of the building, and the presence of
Japanese Knotweed ''Reynoutria japonica'', synonyms ''Fallopia japonica'' and ''Polygonum cuspidatum'', is a species of herbaceous perennial plant in the knotweed and buckwheat family Polygonaceae. Common names include Japanese knotweed and Asian knotweed. It is ...
, which meant insurers could not offer indemnity against the site.


Awards and honours

*2003
Prix De Rome The Prix de Rome () or Grand Prix de Rome was a French scholarship for arts students, initially for painters and sculptors, that was established in 1663 during the reign of Louis XIV of France. Winners were awarded a bursary that allowed them t ...
for Sculpture, NL *2006 Winner of the
Baloise Art Prize The Baloise Art Prize is a prize awarded to two people each year at "Art Statements" sector of the international Art Basel fair. The prize is awarded by the Bâloise group (insurance and banking), a company that works to promote contemporary, eme ...
at Basel Art Fair, CH for ''Is this Guilt in You Too (The Study of a Car in a Field)'' *2006 ABN AMRO Prize, NL *2010
Zurich Art Prize Zurich Art Prize is a Swiss art prize that has been awarded annually by the Museum Haus Konstruktiv together with the Zurich Insurance Group, since 2007. The award includes a cash prize (roughly $100,000 USD), and a solo exhibition in a museum. ...
, from
Haus Konstruktiv Haus Konstruktiv (English: ), or Museum Haus Konstruktiv, is an arts foundation founded by private individuals in 1986 in Zürich, Switzerland. From 1987 to spring 2001, it was located at Seefeldstrasse 317 in the outer Seefeld area of Zurich and ...
*2017 Gander was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the New Year Honours for services to contemporary art. *2019 Inaugural Pommery Prize Winner of $20,000. *2019 he was awarded the Hodder Fellowship at
Princeton University Princeton University is a private university, private Ivy League research university in Princeton, New Jersey, United States. Founded in 1746 in Elizabeth, New Jersey, Elizabeth as the College of New Jersey, Princeton is the List of Colonial ...
. *2022 Gander was made RA for the category of Sculpture.


Publications

*2003 ''Appendix'', Artimo *2006 ''Pure Associations'', ABN AMRO Art Collection *2007 ''Appendix Appendix – A Proposal for a TV Series'', JRP Ringier, 2007 *2007 ''Intellectual Colours'', Silvana Editoriale and Dena Foundation of Contemporary Art *2007 ''Loose Associations and other lectures'', Onestar Press (with EUROPA) *2008 ''Heralded as the New Black'', Ikon Gallery *2010 ''Catalogue Raisonnable Vol: 1'', co-published by JRP Ringier and Westreich/Wagner Publications *2012 ''Le dit du dé'', Villa Arson, les presses du réel *2013 ''Artists' Cocktails'', Dente-de-Leone *2013 ''The Viewing Room: Volume 14. These are the things I don't understand'', Daiwa Press *2013 ''Ampersand'', Dente-de-Leone *2014 ''Culturefield'', Koenig Books *2014 ''The boy Who Always Looked Up'', Lisson Gallery, reprinted *2016 ''Ryan Gander: Night in the Museum'', Hayward Gallery Publishing *2016 ''Fieldwork, the Complete Reader'', Bedford Press *2016 ''Fieldwork An Incomplete Reader'', Plazzy Banter *2017 ''Soft Modernism'', Gallery Hyundai *2017 ''Ryan Gander – These wings aren't for flying'', The National Museum of Art *2017 ''Picasso and I'', Remai Modern *2019 ''Stabs at Academia with Painters Tools'', Morel Books *2019 ''The Annotated Reader'', Dente-de-Leone *2021 ''The Future'', Dent-de-Leone *2021 ''The Rates of Change'', Space K *2021 Ryan Gander, Leporello N° 04, Il’Editions *2023 ''Transformers'', exhibition catalogue "Transformers. Masterpieces of the Frieder Burda Collection in Dialogue with Artificial Beings"
Museum Frieder Burda
Baden-Baden *2023 ''A Melted Snowman'', Lisson Gallery


Music Videos

*2020 ''IDLES - A HYMN'' *2021 ''JOHN - Šibensko Powerhouse''


Personal life

He was born with a severe brittle bone condition. Gander is a wheelchair user who does not identify as being disabled. He explains: "I don't even feel disabled. I've spent my whole life trying not to be disabled, so I don't want to be labelled a "disabled artist." Gander is married to the former director of the Limoncello gallery, Rebecca May Marston, with whom he has two daughters and one son. In 2024 he donated £40,000 to the Labour Party.https://donation.watch/en/unitedkingdom/2024/donors


References


External links

*
Online archive
* Lisson Gallery Representatio

* Mennour Representatio

* Esther Schipper Representatio

* TARO NASU Representatio

* Gallery Hyundai Representatio

* Annet Gelink Representatio

{{DEFAULTSORT:Gander, Ryan Living people 1976 births 21st-century English artists Alumni of Manchester Metropolitan University Artists from Chester Bâloise Prize winners British artists with disabilities English contemporary artists Officers of the Order of the British Empire Royal Academicians Alumni of Rijksakademie van beeldende kunsten Academics of the University of Suffolk Labour Party (UK) donors