Marc Quinn, First Cataract of the Nile, 2010

First Cataract of the Nile, 2010
Oil on Canvas
65 1/2 x 98 7/8 inches
Marc Quinn, Melting The Green Land Ice Sheet, 2008

Melting The Green Land Ice Sheet, 2008
Oil on Canvas
67 x 99 inches
Marc Quinn, Phitsanulok River Ice Thailand, 2009

Phitsanulok River Ice Thailand, 2009
Oil on Canvas
65 x 100 inches
Marc Quinn, The Gates of Hercules, 2008

The Gates of Hercules, 2008
Oil on Canvas
65 x 99 inches
Marc Quinn, Atmospheric Ozone, 2007

Atmospheric Ozone, 2007
Oil on Canvas
65 3/4 x 98 inches
Marc Quinn, Archaeology of Desire, 2008

Archaeology of Desire, 2008
Bronze
91 3/8 x 116 1/8 x 39 3/8 inches
Marc Quinn, Iceburg on Lake Tanganika, 2008

Iceburg on Lake Tanganika, 2008
Oil on Canvas
66 x 100 inches
Marc Quinn, White Mist, 2007

White Mist, 2007
Oil on Canvas
65 x 99 inches

Marc Quinn

b. 1964
Marc Quinn’s wide-ranging oeuvre displays a preoccupation with the mutability of the body and the dualisms that define human life: spiritual and physical, surface and depth, cerebral and sexual. Using an uncompromising array of materials, from ice and blood to glass, marble or lead, Quinn develops these paradoxes into experimental, conceptual works that are mostly figurative in form.

Quinn’s sculpture, paintings and drawings often deal with the distanced relationship we have with our bodies, highlighting how the conflict between the ‘natural’ and ‘cultural’ has a grip on the contemporary psyche. In 1999, Quinn began a series of marble sculptures of amputees as a way of re-reading the aspirations of Greek and Roman statuary and their depictions of an idealised whole. One such work depicted Alison Lapper, a woman who was born without arms, when she was heavily pregnant. Quinn subsequently enlarged this work to make it a major piece of public art for the fourth plinth of Trafalgar Square. Other key themes in his work include genetic modification and hybridism. Garden (2000), for instance, is a walk-through installation of impossibly beautiful flowers that will never decay, or his ‘Eternal Spring’ sculptures, featuring flowers preserved in perfect bloom by being plunged into sub-zero silicone. Quinn has also explored the potential artistic uses of DNA, making a portrait of a sitter by extracting strands of DNA and placing it in a test-tube. DNA Garden (2001), contains the DNA of over 75 plant species as well as 2 humans: a re-enactment of the Garden of Eden on a cellular level. Quinn’s diverse and poetic work meditates on our attempts to understand or overcome the transience of human life through scientific knowledge and artistic expression.