Ben Long

Ben Long operates predominantly within the public realm to produce art that stimulates social interconnectivity and enables diverse audiences to engage with his work. Focusing on British culture, he is particularly interested in reaching those people who would ordinarily have little or no involvement with contemporary art and gallery culture.

This ethos of shared experience and inclusivity is clearly demonstrated in The Great Travelling Art Exhibition, an on-going series of drawings made onto the rear shutters of haulage trucks. Using his finger to scribe into the layer of dirt built up from the vehicles’ exhaust emissions, Long creates the drawings, often travelling with the truck drivers to photograph the artworks in transit. Lasting a finite period, sometimes up to six months, it is precisely this impermanence, vulnerability and unpredictability that give the drawings their point of interest and contemporary relevance.

In Scaffolding Sculptures, Long constructs large-scale public sculptures using conventional scaffolding components. Inspired by the experience of working on building sites as a teenager, his approach to the project asserts both the value of a disciplined working practice and the playful conception of ideas. By comparing work of an artistic nature with the hard graft of manual employment, he attempts to democratize the process of creative production. Scaffolding sculptures, like the truck drawings, exist in a semi-permanent state. Using the scaffolding as a ‘sculptural kit’, Long is able to create new permutations on a regular basis and continually improve his skills in this unconventional medium.

The recently conceived Brass Bandstand project is an ambitious, life-sized reconstruction of a Victorian bandstand, the structure of which is made entirely from highly burnished brass. This architectural sculpture is intended to facilitate music and performance and unite the interests of the community, thereby completing the structure as a living, breathing artwork. The proposal for a full-size, fully operational brass bandstand is a gesture that attempts to revive and re-animate this familiar structure to its former working glory. In doing so, Long intends to inspire a new sense of civic pride and to memorialize and nurture a spirit of communal interaction.

The diverse facets of Long’s practice are unified by a clear aesthetic strategy in which he attempts to elevate the mundane and commonplace to the realm of art. He carefully selects the motifs and objects he works with on the basis of their mass appeal and how they register as cultural archetypes. The use of symbolism – the male and female of a species of bird, the concentric crown of a monarch, a red telephone booth, the image of a rearing horse – is encountered in British culture daily to the extent that it pervades our collective subconscious. The symbols that Long uses are particularly potent because they either stand for sentiments and expressions such as hope, love, power, or they imply states of being, necessary to human survival, such as communication, shelter, travel or work.

Long’s work is characterized by craftsmanship and technical skill that he attempts to hone with each new project. He deliberately uses craft as a device to increase the appeal of the work to a broad audience, and goes to great lengths to distinguish himself as the craftsman behind this work. It is in this role of artist as craftsman that Long brings a performance aspect to his practice, with the chance of his work being experienced during the creative act connecting him to other artists such as Gordon Matta-Clark and Keith Haring.

Ben Long’s diverse practice, in which the incongruous juxtaposition of high and low culture, art and materials becomes seemingly logical, unites people within a social framework and promotes the creative act as an integral part of daily life.

Born in Lancaster, England in 1978, Ben Long lives and works in London.

Education
2001-2003: BA, Camberwell College of Art, London

Solo Exhibitions
2009: ‘Crown Jewels’, Man&Eve, London
2008: ‘Art Work’, Man&Eve, London – ‘Solo Show’, Maxwell Davidson Gallery, New York
2006: ‘The Great Travelling Art Exhibition’, Man&Eve, London

Selected Public Art Works
2010: ‘Dog Scaffolding Sculpture II,’ F. E. McWilliam Gallery, Banbridge, Co. Down, Northern Ireland
2009: ‘Horse Scaffolding Sculpture’, CAS commission for the Economist Plaza, London
2008: ‘Stag Scaffolding Sculpture’, London – ‘Skip, My Darling’, London
2006: ‘Dog Scaffolding Sculpture’, Farnborough
2004: ‘Bird Scaffolding Sculpture’, Lancashire

Selected Group Exhibitions
2010: ‘Material Worlds: Contemporary Sculpture from Ireland and the UK’, F. E. McWilliam Gallery, Banbridge, Co. Down, Northern Ireland – ‘Heart of Glass’, ‘Concrete & Glass’, 20 Hoxton Square Projects
2009: ‘Giddee-up’, University for the Arts gallery, London
2008: ‘NEXT art fair’, Chicago
2007: ‘Drawn Apart – West’, Day & Faber, London – ‘Drawn Apart – East’, Contemporary Art Projects, London – ‘Year_07 Art Projects’, London – ‘Aqua Wynwood’, Miami
2005: ‘Street Art’, Washington DC, USA
2004: ‘The Big Draw’, The Pump House – ‘The Line Fell Off The Page’, 004 Biennale of Sydney, Australia
2003: ‘The Big Draw’, The Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art, Gateshead UK
2002: ‘Northern Soul’, 198 Gallery, London UK

Prizes/Awards
‘Prospects Contemporary Drawing Prize’ Short-list – ‘Essor Gallery’, London UK

Published work and Reviews
Dazed and Confused, Grafik, Got Done Magazine, Re-Action Magazine, Desktop Magazine–Australia, The Sydney Morning Herald, The Wentworth Courier–Australia, The Sydney Magazine (SMH), Artlink Vol. 24–Australia, The Sydney City Hub–Australia, Oyster Magazine–Australia, Guardian supplement–UK, ID Magazine–UK, Strada Magazine–UK, Scene Scania–UK, The Australian, The Sun–UK, The Times_UK, The Daily Mail–UK, The Guardian–UK, The Metro–London, South London Press–London, Time Out–London, The Daily Star–UK, The Evening Standard–London , The Telegraph–UK.