Daniel Silver

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Daniel Silver
Photo by Andrea Spotorno
Born1972 (1972)
EducationRoyal College of Art, Slade School of Art
Known forSculpture
SpouseTali Silver

Daniel Silver (born 1972) is an artist living in London.

Life and career[edit]

Silver was born in London and raised in Jerusalem. Silver studied at the Slade School of Art (BA Fine Art, 1999). He received his MA in Sculpture from the Royal College of Art, London in 2001. He went on to study sculpture in Italy at the British School at Rome in 2002. He has exhibited across the UK and internationally. Silver is represented by Frith Street Gallery London.

Work[edit]

Silver's work includes sculpture, painting, drawing and installation. His work draws from ancient sculptural archetypes[1][2] and modernist sculptors, like Jacob Epstein and Henri Gaudier-Brzeska.[3] Despite its references to figurative sculptural traditions, the former director of the Museu Nacional de Belas Artes (Rio de Janeiro) Paulo Herkenhoff[4] described Daniel Silver’s sculpture as a “dyslexic body” which “refuses to follow a canon, or an established grammar which builds meanings, or work in pre-mapped territory”.[5]

Silver explores and manipulates the sculptural figure in his work. As his practice has developed he has examined the physical and emotional impact of the body and its representation. He has said that he is particularly interested in the head as his subject. “The reason I make the head is, on the one hand to continue the bust-making tradition, and on the other that they are the most interesting part of the body, the most object-like part of the body.”

Exhibitions[edit]

Silver's projects include Dig,[6] a commission by producers, Artangel. This sculptural installation was located in Grafton Way, into a derelict site where once was located one of London's largest Odeon Cinemas.[7] Silver presented an imagined archeological dig of sculptures looking both ancient and futuristic,[8] conceived by the artist as a “history of sculpture”.[9] The project is inspired by Freud’s collection of antiques,[10] which was used by Freud as a reservoir of metaphors to interpret his patients' traumatic experiences. Similarly, Silver is interested in the psychological and emotional dimension of sculpture[11] and to investigate its relation with memory and history.[12] In an interview with Ben Luke, Silver explained that "To be an archaeologist is about understanding our past through objects. I’m also trying to figure out things that are more psychological, about us as people, and objects throughout time allow me to do that.” [13]

Selected exhibitions[edit]

Awards[edit]

Silver is a recipient of the Henry Moore Artist in Residency (2005), Rome Scholar in Fine Arts, The British School at Rome (2002), Credit Suisse First Boston Award, US (2001) and the Sharett Scholarship, America Israel Cultural Foundation, New York, US (2000).[21]

Selected bibliography[edit]

  • Daniel Silver: Dig. Published by Artangel (2013) [22]
  • Daniel Silver. Published by Art Editions North (2007) [23]

Footnotes[edit]

  1. ^ Trezzi, Nicola. "RE: DIASPORA". Flash Art. Archived from the original on 28 September 2013.
  2. ^ "Zabludowicz Collection".
  3. ^ Luke, Ben (29 August 2013). "Can you Dig it? Artist Daniel Silver on new Artangel commission". London Evening Standard.
  4. ^ "Paulo Herkenhoff curator and critic, Rio de Janeiro". Former West.
  5. ^ Herkenhoff, Paulo (2007). Daniel Silver. London: Northern Gallery for Contemporary Art; Camden Art Centre. p. 83.
  6. ^ Artangel. "Dig by Daniel Silver".
  7. ^ Cooke, Rachel (15 September 2013). "Artangel/ Daniel Silver: Dig – review". The Observer.
  8. ^ Swirsky, Rebecca. "Artangel commission: Daniel Silver's 'Dig'". Royal Academy of Arts. Archived from the original on 23 September 2013.
  9. ^ Luke, Ben (29 August 2013). "Can you Dig it? Artist Daniel Silver on new Artangel commission". London Evening Standard.
  10. ^ Sharp, Rob. "Freud Inspires Daniel Silver Artangel Commission". Blouinartinfo.
  11. ^ Dorment, Richard (9 September 2013). "Dig, The Odeon Site, review". The Telegraph.
  12. ^ Kennedy, Maev (8 September 2013). "Daniel Silver's sculptures for Artangel inspired by 'the puzzle of time'". The Guardian.
  13. ^ Luke, Ben (29 August 2013). "Can you Dig it? Artist Daniel Silver on new Artangel commission". London Evening Standard.
  14. ^ Hawlin, Thea. "Review of Daniel Silver: Rock Formations, Frith Street Gallery, London". Aesthetica Magazine.
  15. ^ Shaw, Anny. "A Thousand Doors". Frieze. Archived from the original on 8 December 2015.
  16. ^ Michalska, Julia. "Daniel Silver's archaeological dig for Artangel". The Art Newspaper.
  17. ^ "DANIEL SILVER – Coming Together". Contemporaryart.com.
  18. ^ Williams, Gilda. "Gilda Williams on Daniel Silver". Artforum.
  19. ^ "Daniel Silver Transforms Camden Arts Centre". Art Daily.
  20. ^ "Daniel Silver at the Northern Gallery for Contemporary Art". Archived from the original on 27 September 2013.
  21. ^ "Galleria Suzy Shammah".
  22. ^ "Daniel Silver: Dig, published by Artangel".
  23. ^ "Daniel Silver, published by Art Editions North".

External links[edit]