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Transport for London

New Big Ben artwork for Gloucester Road Tube station

06 June 2012

From 12 June 2012, passengers will be treated to an epic artwork which has been created for the eighteen arches that span the length of the disused platform at Gloucester Road Tube station.

As we move towards one of the most exciting summers in London's history, visitors from all over the world will be able to enjoy this dramatic artwork as they travel across the Capital for the London 2012 Games

Munira Mirza, Deputy Mayor for Education and Culture

This latest installation is by international artist Sarah Morris and was commissioned by Art on the Underground.

As Tube trains enter the station customers will see a spectrum of evolving colour as they travel past the many arches. This progression recalls the countdown to a spectacle or event, and also parallels the way in which a train pulls in and out of the station.

Recognised for her brightly coloured and complex paintings and installations, Sarah Morris's work for Gloucester Road derives from a painting of Big Ben that she created as one of the twelve posters for the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games. 

Connects Games

An iconic marker of the Capital's history and architecture, as well as a symbol of movement and time, Morris's expression of Big Ben through line and colour connects both the Underground and the 2012 Games.

Morris's almost filmic treatment of Gloucester Road Station in Big Ben [2012], conceives London as a grid of non-linear narratives, brought together by time as people pass through public space. 

Morris's longstanding practice uses the visceral properties of colour as well as fictional cinematic space produced through the use of real situations in her films. 

The Olympics and the idea of spectacle are represented in past films such as Beijing (2008) and 1972 (2008), and subway stations have featured in works such as her seminal film Midtown (1998), and others including Miami (2002), Los Angeles (2004) and Chicago (2011).

Arrival and departure

Sarah Morris, said: 'This is the first series of images where I've treated London as a subject, as a starting point. Stripped bare, Big Ben [2012] is a streamlined image of time, and ironically anti-authoritarian: no-one can control the politics of the future.

'I wanted to create a spectrum of colour that parallels the movement in and out of Gloucester Road station, an image of arrival and departure.'

Munira Mirza, Deputy Mayor for Education and Culture, said: 'As we move towards one of the most exciting summers in London's history, visitors from all over the world will be able to enjoy this dramatic artwork as they travel across the Capital for the London 2012 Games.'

Louise Coysh, Curator for Art on the Underground, said, 'We're delighted to commission Sarah Morris as the twelfth internationally acclaimed artist at our flagship site. 

'Her work resonates very strongly not only with London's architecture and transport infrastructure, but most especially with the energy and excitement in the Capital during 2012.'

The Gloucester Road commissions provide invited artists with the opportunity to create ambitious, temporary new work in response to Art on the Underground's flagship site and its context, which has more than one million visitors each month. 

Since the inaugural exhibition by Cindy Sherman in 2003, there have been eleven artists' projects presented so far, including significant new works by Chiho Aoshima, David Batchelor, Brian Griffiths, Beatriz Milhazes and Mark Titchner.

View at Tate Britain

From 21 June-21 September, a limited edition print of Sarah Morris's original Big Ben [2012] work will be on display at Tate Britain; this Paralympic poster is one of twelve officially commissioned posters for the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games. 

The official posters of the Games are a unique celebration of 100 years of the meeting of art and sport, and a body of iconic work that has been created over the last century.

In collaboration with the London 2012 Festival, Art on the Underground is proud to present the twelve official London 2012 Games poster artworks in exhibitions at Southwark and Piccadilly Underground stations, until December 2012.


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