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Creative, playful and inventive, Gabriel Orozco creates art in the streets, his apartment or wherever he is inspired. Born in Mexico but working across the globe, Orozco is renowned for his endless experimentation with found objects, which he subtly alters.

His sculptures, often made of everyday things that have interested him, reveal new ways of looking at something familiar. A skull with a geometric pattern carefully drawn onto it, a classic Citroën DS car which the artist sliced into thirds, removing the central part to exaggerate its streamlined design, and a scroll filled with numbers cut out of a phone book are just some of his unique sculptures.

Orozco’s photos are also on display, capturing the beauty of fleeting moments: water collecting in a punctured football, tins of cat food arranged on top of watermelons in a supermarket, or condensed breath disappearing from the surface of a piano show Orozco’s eye for simple but surprising and powerful images.

His art also shows his fascination with game-playing, for example a billiard table with no pockets and a pendulum-like hanging ball, or Knights Running Endlessly, an extended chess board filled with an army of horses, both of which are well-known games to which he has added an element of futility. This kind of unexpected twist makes Orozco’s work interesting to both contemporary art lovers and also anyone who wants an unusual and captivating art experience.

Tate curator Jessica Morgan and artist Gabriel Orozco in the artist's exhibition at Tate Modern

Tate curator Jessica Morgan and artist Gabriel Orozco in the artist's exhibition at Tate Modern

Poignant remnants - from the washing machine. An installation view of Gabriel Orozco's 'Lintels'. courtesy The Museum of Modern Art, New York

Poignant remnants - from the washing machine. An installation view of Gabriel Orozco's 'Lintels'. courtesy The Museum of Modern Art, New York

Gabriel Orozco

happens
from 19/01/2011
to 25/04/2011

where
Tate Modern
Bankside London SE1 9TG
Open Sun–Thu 10-18h. Fri and Sat 10–22h. Last admission 17h15 (Fri and Sat 21h15). Closed 24, 25 and 26 December (open as normal on 1 January)
e-mail

source
Tate Modern
London UK

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