George Shaw MCMLXXVII Year 2015 Medium Pencil on paper Dimensions 30 x 21 cm Top pick from Mark Wallinger, Artist About the work George Shaw always contributes a drawn pencil portrait of a deceased person, often a character from a b movie or tv sitcom of the 1970 or 80s. The drawing of Jesus is Robert Powell from the TV film ‘Jesus of Nazareth’. When it came out in 1977 it was a sensation and for years the image of Powell was how the artist imagined Christ. Date and country of birth 1966, GB About the artist Born 1966 Coventry, George Shaw lives and works in Devon. Graduated from Royal College of Art, London (1998); and Sheffield Polytechnic (1992). Shaw bases his detailed paintings on photographs of the proletarian suburbs, often taken by the artist himself and his family, or published in local magazines. His suburban landscapes, showing town halls, rows of garages, faded parks or playgrounds, are the result of a meticulous application of Humbrol enamel on wood, a process that results in attractive, brilliant, and highly detailed images. Selected solo exhibitions include A Corner of a Foreign Field, Holburne Museum, Bath and Yale Centre for British Art, New Haven (2018-2019); The Lost of England, MARUANI MERCIER, Brussels (2017); My Back to Nature, National Gallery, London (2016); Neither My Arse Nor My Elbow, Douglas Hyde Gallery, Dublin (2013); The Sly and Unseen Day, South London Gallery, London (2013); The Sly and Unseen Day and Payne’s Grey, BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art, Gateshead (2011); I Woz Ere, The Herbert Art Gallery, Coventry (2011); Looking for Baz, Shaz, Gaz and Daz, VOID, Derry (2010); Poets Day, Kunstverein Freiburg (2007); and Centre d ‘Art Contemporain, Geneva (2006). Selected group exhibitions include Among the Trees, Hayward Gallery, London (2020); Large Against the Sky, Small Between the Stars, The Quebec City Biennial (2019); British Arts Council Collection touring exhibition, Okayama Prefectural Museum of Art, Kita (2015); REALITY, Sainsbury Centre for Visual Art, Norwich (2014); Out of Britain, National Museum of Bucharest (2013); Nothing Like Something Happens Anywhere, Chapter Gallery, Cardiff (2011); and British Art Show 7, Nottingham and touring (2010). Awards include nomination for a South Bank Sky Arts Awards (2017), and the Turner Prize (2011). Residencies include Associate Artist at the National Gallery, London (2014-16).