Marten's work includes sculpture, screen-printing and writing. Helen has used handmade and found objects within her work, including cotton buds, coins, shoe soles, limes, marbles, eggs and snooker chalk. The artist has expressed a particular interest in language, stating: "Language is a system that we know very well how to exploit and wrap around things. Words are communicating, but at the same time they're tumbling about themselves in a very knotty chaos of pictures and images." Like her physical works, Marten's texts and titles reflect and reinforce her play and logic. "If Marten's objects are treasures found in some future archeological dig, then perhaps her texts provide a map or a diagram for the products of that digging." Marten's first British solo show was in 2012, at the
Chisenhale Gallery in London. On winning the
Hepworth Prize for Sculpture in November 2016, she announced that she would share the £30,000 prize money with the three others on the shortlist, saying: "In the light of the world's ever lengthening political shadow, the art world has a responsibility to show how democracy should work. I was flattered to be on the shortlist and even more so if my fellow nominees would share the Prize with me". She added: "Here's to a furthering of communality and a platform for everyone". Similarly, after winning the
Turner Prize the following month the BBC reported that she had told it that she also planned to share it "but felt she could only make such a public proclamation once", and quoted her as saying: "This is something that can happen much more discreetly between the four of us". For the Turner Prize, 2016 exhibition, held at
Tate Britain, Marten included three works from the exhibitions for which she was nominated: her presentation at the 56th Venice Biennale and
Eucalyptus, Let us in at
Greene Naftali Gallery, New York. Focusing on rhythms of rest and work, the sculptures were reconceived at Tate Britain as a single installation. They consisted of:
Lunar Nibs (a sculpture resembling a house, a dumpster and even a feeding trough for cattle, whose main facade looked like a caricatured nineteenth-century residence),
On aerial greens (haymakers), (a wall- and floor-based pairing formally resembling a fireplace or hearth) and Brood and Bitter Pass (a large-scale work composed of spun aluminium forms, wooden ellipsoids, ceramic parts and mechanical joints in a worm-like form). ==Critical reception==