Chris Evans (artist)

For other people of the same name, see Christopher Evans.

Chris Evans is a British artist based in London and a tutor at De Ateliers in Amsterdam. He was the bassist for the now defunct band Life Without Buildings.[1]

As introduced in the publicity material for the 2014 Liverpool Biennial, "his work often evolves through conversation with people from diverse walks of life, selected in relation to their public life or symbolic role. Sculptures, letters, drawings, film scripts and unwieldy social situations created as a result of this, are indexes of a larger structure through which Evans deliberately confuses the roles of artist and patron, author and muse".[2] Since 2005, and on numerous occasions worldwide, Evans has invited representatives from national police forces to give recruitment presentations at art academies, including, in 2008, Pratt Institute, New York and, in 2015 Academy of Fine Arts, Nuremberg. His work is held in various national collections including the Arts Council England,[3] Sculpture International Rotterdam[4] and the Lithuanian Parliament.

Biography

Evans was born in Eastrington in 1967. He studied Graphic Design at Leicester De Montford University and completed a Master in Fine Art in 1993 at Winchester School of Art - at their now defunct annex in Barcelona.

Exhibitions

In 2005 Chris Evans participated in the 6th British Art Show and the following year in Eastinternational. Since then he has exhibited in several international art Biennials: Athens Biennial in 2007, Taipei Biennial in 2010 and Liverpool Biennial in 2014. He has had numerous solo exhibitions, including: Praxes Centre for Contemporary Art, Berlin (2015); Markus Lüttgen, Cologne (2015); Project Arts Centre, Dublin, Ireland (2014); The Gardens, Vilnius (2014); Piper Keys, London (2014); Juliette Jongma (2012); Lüttgenmeijer, Berlin (2011); Marres, Maastricht (2010); British School in Rome (2008); Artpace, San Antonio (2007); STORE, London (2007); Stedelijk Museum Bureau Amsterdam (2006); and Studio Voltaire, London, (2006).

Books

References

External links

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