Gilbert & George

COMMIT NO NUISANCE

COMMIT NO NUISANCE by Gilbert & George

Artwork Detail

GILBERT & GEORGE met in 1967 at Saint Martin’s School of Art in London and developed their signature ‘living sculptures’ by walking the city’s streets. Since then, they have lived and worked together as two people, but one artist – their individual identities subsumed as they became representations of the human condition, a central theme in their artwork.

GILBERT & GEORGE’S photocollage work COMMIT NO NUISANCE announces their motto of ‘ART FOR ALL.’ It is firmly based in their experience of where they live during the COVID 19 pandemic.

Shortly after art school, GILBERT & GEORGE moved to Spitalfields in London’s East End, then a bustling immigrant and working-class neighbourhood, and this has been where their home and studio has been located for 50 years. The changing nature of the neighbourhood over five decades testifies to GILBERT & GEORGE’S

response to the socio-political and urban transformation of East London.

COMMIT NO NUISANCE shows their response to how people live near Christ Church, the renowned heritage building, which is one of London’s most important baroque buildings. During the COVID 19 pandemic the area surrounding it remains as seedy and sleazy as it was during the late 18th century.

Title
COMMIT NO NUISANCE
Artist/creator
Gilbert & George
Production date
2020
Medium
mixed media
Dimensions
4440 x 2270 mm
Credit line
Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, purchased 2022 with support from the Elise Mourant Bequest and Peggy and Richard Greenfield. Image © Gilbert & George. Courtesy the artists and Lehmann Maupin, New York, Hong Kong, Seoul, and London.
Accession no
2022/25.1-21
Copyright
Copying restrictions apply
Department
International Art
Display status
Not on display

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