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    • Image courtesy of flickr.com

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      • In a series of live performances, such as The Singing Sculpture (1969), Gilbert & George appeared dressed in business suits with their faces covered in bronze powder, and, using staccato and puppetlike gestures, they sang and moved to the accompaniment of a recording of the Depression-era song “Underneath the Arches.”
      www.britannica.com/biography/Gilbert-and-George
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    • Who Is Gilbert & George?
    • Living Sculptures
    • Singing Sculptures
    • About The Artists: Gilbert and George

    The artist duo of George Passmore and Gilbert Proesch – famously known as Gilbert and George – is undoubtedly one of the most long-standing and prolific collaborations of the post-conceptual art era. Perhaps the pair is best recognized for its wall-to-wall, colorful paintings, such as The Tuileries(1974).

    However, what ultimately put Gilbert and George on the map is their signature performance art, Living Sculptures. In this work, the two artists painted all over themselves in metallic makeup and started roaming around the streets of London, mimicking sculptures.

    Living Sculpturesis the first kind of living or performance art conceived by Gilbert and George in 1969 when they were students at the St. Martin’s School of Art in London. It’s what it sounds like. The two covered their faces in bronze paint before walking around London streets as they danced and performed a repetitive series of actions. In 1970, ...

    George Passmore was born in 1942 in England, while his artist half, Gilbert Proesch, was born a year later in Italy. The duo has been active in the performance art scene for more than five decades, creating life-and-art works that “scream for attention.”

  2. Sep 13, 2017 · Gilbert & George made The General Jungle in 1971 to accompany their Singing Sculpture, which consisted of the two of them singing Underneath the Arches for hours and hours on end. This...

  3. May 7, 2007 · They established their reputation in 1969 with THE SINGING SCULPTURE. Standing together on a table, they danced and sang the Flanagan and Allen standard Underneath the Arches – a song in which two tramps describe the pleasures of sleeping rough.

  4. Jun 12, 2005 · The Singing Sculpture marked their debut as a self-styled living work of art. It was presented for the first time in London, in 1969, at a venue in. Cable Street. , and took the form of a long and deliberately repetitive performance.

  5. Whilst still students, Gilbert & George made The Singing Sculpture, which was performed at the National Jazz and Blues Festival in 1969 and at the Nigel Greenwood Gallery in 1970. [16]

  6. 'The work is part of the cycle "The General Jungle or Carrying on Sculpting" (1971) in which Gilbert & George act as "living sculptures", using their bodies as material and fusing art with the...

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