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Desert Island Discs

Cornelia Parker

Desert Island Discs

BBC

Society & Culture, Music Commentary, Music, Personal Journals

4.413.7K Ratings

🗓️ 16 February 2003

⏱️ 34 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Sue Lawley's castaway this week is the artist Cornelia Parker. Cornelia grew up in the country where she lived on a small holding looked after by her father. She spent much of her time mucking out pigs, milking cows, laying hedges and tying up tomato plants. Her means of escape was to run into the fields to daydream. English and art were her favourite subjects, and a trip to the Tate Gallery in London with her school when she was aged 15 confirmed that she wanted to be an artist. After studying art at college, Cornelia turned her hand to sculpture, inspired by the Arte Povera movement in Italy which rejected traditional marble and bronze and used any materials they chose. She developed her style by mixing with other students and collaborating with theatre groups. Cornelia liked the idea of her work being ephemeral and didn't worry about it's existence beyond an exhibition. For her first solo exhibition in 1980 she showed a number of pieces and because she had nowhere to store them, told the organisers that afterwards they could give them to local schools. "I don't know what they did with them!" she says. After a car accident in 1994 Cornelia began to realise the importance of keeping some of her work and she began to be represented by a gallery. She broadened her collaborations - for her piece Cold Dark Matter: An Exploded View she got the British Army to blow up a shed so that she could hang it back together again, suspended around a lightbulb. For her piece Wedding Ring Drawing she employed a silversmith who could draw a gold wedding ring into a very fine thread. In 1995 she worked with the actress Tilda Swinton on a project The Maybe, which included Tilda herself exhibited in a glass case. In 1997 Cornelia was nominated for the Turner Prize for her work. [Taken from the original programme material for this archive edition of Desert Island Discs] Favourite track: Cry Baby by Janis Joplin Book: World of Wonder: 10,000 things every child should know by Charles Ray Luxury: A solar-powered vibrator

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hello, I'm Kesti Young and this is a podcast from the Desert Island Discs archive for rights reasons

0:06.0

We've had to shorten the music

0:08.0

The program was originally broadcast in 2003 and the presenter was Sue Lawley

0:30.0

My cause away this week is an artist. Conventionally she'd be called a sculptor but she doesn't actually make anything herself

0:36.0

Her raw ingredients come from the world around her

0:39.0

The garden shed, domestic silverware, chalk from the Dovercliffs, beaten, flattened, exploded

0:44.0

or simply rearranged to give them new meaning

0:47.0

She's been nominated for the Turner Prize, she's been artist in residence at the Science Museum

0:51.0

and she's got shows coming up in New York, Geneva, Barcelona, Copenhagen

0:56.0

and a new piece shortly to go on show at Tate Britain

0:59.0

Brought up on a Cheshire farm where hard manual labour drove her into artistic escape

1:05.0

She went to art school where she won a first class degree and has worked as an artist all her professional life

1:10.0

I know there are people who are hostile to my work, she says

1:13.0

But artists who try new things have always been hated

1:17.0

She is Cornelia Parker

1:19.0

How much do you mind Cornelia being hated as you push it? Does it sting?

1:24.0

Hated is too strong a word

1:26.0

I don't mind really as opposed to the whole point of when I first went to art school

1:30.0

I thought I was being a rebel and it felt a very comfortable fit somehow

1:34.0

And now it's obviously not that at all

1:37.0

But I don't mind being hated

1:39.0

So as long as you get a response then that's what you want

...

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