The Stuckists have demonstrated annually at
Tate Britain on the occasion of the
Turner Prize since 2000, and have been featured extensively in the media for their appearances. The demonstrations have adopted a variety of themes to make their point, which is simply that the prize is named after a famous painter, but painting is neglected by it in favour of other media. Their Turner Prize manifesto comments: "The only person who wouldn't be in danger of winning the Turner Prize is Turner." This is a leaflet they have handed out to the public and prize ceremony guests. Although they have always been outside the building during the actual prize ceremony, they have, on two occasions, been mentioned by the guest of honour on live TV, just before the announcement of the winner—by Sir
Peter Blake in 2003 and by Culture Minister,
David Lammy in 2005.
2000 The first Stuckist demonstration took place outside Tate Britain on Turner Prize day, 28 November 2000. The group took care to work within the regulations in order to subvert them and ridicule the institution. They were dressed as clowns, and had obtained advance permission to enter the museum in this costume. They announced on their web site (and in the London
Evening Standard):
Damien Hirst's godmother, the late Margaret Walsh, announced the "Art Clown of the Year" for "outstanding idiocy in the visual arts" was
Charles Saatchi, the prize being a custard pie, which the winner was expected to purchase and administer on themselves. This award continued to be made in subsequent years. They then paraded outside
Tate Britain in clown costumes, walked into the museum and around the exhibition itself. To coincide with the Tate's show, they also staged their own concurrent show
The Real Turner Prize Show with simultaneous shows of the same name in Germany and Australia.
The Guardian announced the winner of the real Turner Prize with the headline "Turner Winner Riles the Stuckists".
2001 There was a demonstration in ordinary clothes at the Prize press launch on 6 November.
The Independent on Sunday said, "In certain respects the Turner Prize never changes: art fleetingly makes the front pages; the dreary Stuckists protest outside the Tate and the winner gets a cheque for 20 grand." Another demonstration took place on the Prize ceremony day, 9 December: this reached a worldwide TV audience, when it was syndicated by
Reuters. The work of one nominee,
Martin Creed, was an empty room, where the lights went on and off every five seconds.
Ekow Eshun wrote, "if scandal equated directly to success then this year's winners should probably be the Stuckists, the ragged band of artist malcontents who've turned their annual placard-waving anti-Turner protest outside the Tate into a kind of art event of their own that now generates press attention from around the world." The Stuckists gave their "Art Clown of the Year Award" to Sir Nicholas Serota. Other nominees were
Charles Saatchi (the winner in 2000),
Norman Rosenthal and
Sarah Kent. and announced in
The Daily Telegraph with the headline: "A custard pie for Serota as Turner Prize winner named." Meanwhile, the
Stuckism International Gallery staged
The Real Turner Prize Show 2002.
2003 In 2003, the Stuckists displayed two blow-up sex dolls to parody
Jake and Dinos Chapman's bronze (painted) sculpture modelled on one. As guests, including
Jay Jopling,
Tracey Emin,
Victoria Miro and Jake Chapman, arrived, they were greeted with the announcement, "Turner Prize preview—see the original here and the copy inside."
Sarah Kent, art editor of
Time Out, commented, "Fucking Stuckists... yes, you can quote me." The Stuckists turned this to their advantage with placards such as: "Charles Saatchi & Stuckists v the Tate" and "No painters in the Turner Prize for the last 4 years!" The Turner show itself was characterised by video and computer imagery, including a virtual tour of one of
Osama bin Laden's former residences. Thomson was quoted by the BBC website: "A lot of the stuff this year would be suitable for a Channel 4 documentary. There is no need for this to be in the Tate gallery when television does exactly the same thing." To bring their point home, the Stuckists handed out a leaflet which read, with the mock tone of officialdom: "We apologise for the lack of art in this year's Turner Prize. As an alternative, you will find a display of enthusiasts' television programmes and computer games." They also announced:
2005 ,
Tate Britain, December 2005, demonstrate against the purchase of
Chris Ofili's
The Upper Room. The cutout is Tate Chairman
Paul Myners. The Stuckists demonstrated outside the
Turner Prize on 6 December 2005 against the Tate's purchase of its trustee,
Chris Ofili's work,
The Upper Room. They displayed placards with slogans such as "£25,000 Turner Prize, £705,000 Trustee Prize", and wore monkey and elephant masks, referring to the monkeys Ofili had painted in his work, as well as the trademark balls of elephant dung it was propped on. The demonstrators were approached by Sir
Nicholas Serota, and the atmosphere was tense, according to Thomson: "I thought he was going to explode ... I looked at his face and I thought, this guy's going to lose it and hit me, or he's going to burst into tears."
Andrew Marr, a guest at the evening Prize reception, commented, "When they picketed us, the Stuckists seemed to me affable and intelligent people", although he strongly disagreed with them over Ofili's work. That evening in front of guests at the award ceremony in what Marr described as a "moment of rare passion" and an "unusual, possibly unprecedented" move, Serota spoke out with "an angry defence" of the purchase, Following this, David Lammy, the Culture Minister, made a brief speech before presenting the award, commenting, "Every year, the Turner Prize makes contemporary art the talk of the airwaves ... Stuckists threaten never to paint again", (although there is no evidence they had ever made such a statement). The Stuckists were included in reports on the Prize by the four UK broadsheets and in a Reuters syndication internationally, where Thomson commented, "The Tate is run by a self-serving clique who hide behind secretiveness" and "The real prize at the Tate is becoming a trustee. It's worth far more money." The winner,
Simon Starling had converted a shed into a boat and back again;
The Times quoted Thomson that "The Turner should be renamed the B&Q diy prize."
2006 holding a protest leaflet showing his portrait The Stuckists handed Sir Nicholas Serota a demonstration leaflet with a Turner Prize "health warning" on one side (claiming that "the exhibits may cause drowsiness or headaches") and Thomson's painting of him on the other. He held it up and said, "Can't you make another image?" Tate chairman
Paul Myners informed demonstrating artist,
John Bourne, "We are grateful for the extra publicity the Stuckists have given the Tate". She encountered the demonstrators, whilst going outside from the judging to have a cigarette, afterwards saying she was horrified to see her words displayed: "The words were taken completely out of context (I dread to think how often celebs have said that to me in interviews, and how often I have disbelieved them) but now I am stuck with being a hero of the Stuckist tendency. I scuttled back into the Tate and survived three hours without nicotine rather than risk encountering them again. and in media abroad.
2007 The Stuckists announced that they were not demonstrating for the first time since 2000, because of "the lameness of this year’s show, which does not merit the accolade of the traditional demo". They criticised the "recycling" of nominees as being laziness by the jury (two of the four had been nominated in previous years) and stated that Tate Chairman,
Paul Myners had previously thanked them for giving the Tate extra publicity. They also claimed that
Mark Wallinger had copied their idea of walking round a museum dressed in a costume, that he was indistinguishable from a Stuckist demonstrator, and that his work was "utter bilge", which had "all the excitement of watching a pensioner do the shopping at Asda".
2008 There was a demonstration by the artists, wearing black top hats, Condemning the Tate's promotion of conceptual art and the lack of figurative painting in the show (citing
Stella Vine as one painter who has been passed over), Demonstration material is stored in the Tate archive and Tate officials have thanked the demonstrators for generating publicity; Tate Britain director, Stephen Deuchar, said, "In a sense, that is the whole point of the prize: to encourage public debate."
Turner Prize manifesto Childish and Thomson issued a Turner Prize manifesto, dated 1 September 2000. The text is:
Tate response Sir
Nicholas Serota wrote to the Stuckists in 2005, rejecting a donation of Stuckist paintings, but saying he wanted to ensure "the Tate archive, as the national record of art in Britain, properly represents the contribution of the Stuckist movement to debates about contemporary art in recent years." ==
New Blood feud with Saatchi==