Paul Rooney | |
---|---|
Born | 1967 (age 56–57) |
Alma mater | |
Occupation | Artist |
Notable work | Lucy Over Lancashire |
Awards | Northern Art Prize (2008) |
Website |
www |
Paul Rooney (born 1967 in Liverpool) is an English artist who works with music and words, primarily through installations and records. [1]
He studied painting at Edinburgh College of Art. [2] In the late 1990s his art practice shifted from painting to video and music, initially with the artist group Common Culture and then the band Rooney. [3] [4] His work later focussed on sound and music within video works, installations and performances. [5] [6] [1]
His art works often explore the difficulties inherent in the representation of place, mixing unreliable narratives of personal experience and urban myth. [7] [4]
Awards include an Abbey Award in Painting at The British School at Rome in 1995, [2] Art Prize North in 2003, [8] [9] the Northern Art Prize in 2008, [10] and the Morton Award for Lens Based Work (2012). [11] His works have been purchased for the Arts Council Collection [12] and through the Contemporary Art Society Acquisitions Scheme. [13]
The three CD music albums released from 1998 to 2000 under the band name Rooney (not the later US band of the same name) [4] [3] were broadcast by BBC Radio 1 ( John Peel Show) amongst others, [14] and the track Went to Town reached number 44 in John Peel's Festive Fifty of 1998. [15] [16] Rooney became a live band in time to record a Peel session in 1999.
Paul Rooney continued to perform or work with other musicians in the early 2000s, such as The NWRA House Band, touring a 'variety night' [17] and a 'rock opera' amongst other performance projects. [18] His gallery works — now primarily sound and music based installations but also including video and writing — developed through commissions for organisations such as Sound and Music [19] and Film and Video Umbrella, [20] and through a period of residencies and fellowships at institutions including Durham University; [2] University of Dundee; [21] Tate Liverpool; [5] Proyecto Batiscafo, Havana; [22] [23] Oxford University; [24] University of Melbourne; [24] and University of Wolverhampton. [5]
Electric Earth: Film and Video from Britain, a British Council exhibition which toured internationally from 2003, included early music/video work by Rooney. [25] In 2004 he curated Pass the Time of Day, a UK touring exhibition dealing with the relationship between music and ' the everyday'. Pass the Time of Day included works by Arab Strap, Rodney Graham and Susan Philipsz amongst others. [26] [27] [16] The following year Rooney's work was selected for the survey show British Art Show 6, [28] which toured the UK in 2005–2006. Rooney had solo shows at venues such as Site Gallery, Sheffield (a two-person show with Susan Philipsz, 2003); [29] and Matt's Gallery, London (2008). [30] [31]
He returned to releasing records in 2007 with the red vinyl 12" Lucy Over Lancashire, on SueMi Records of Berlin. [16] Released under his full name of 'Paul Rooney', it was specifically made for broadcast on BBC Radio Lancashire, [32] but BBC Radio 1 [33] and BBC 6 Music [34] were amongst the other stations who broadcast the piece. [35] [36]
In 2012 Rooney had a solo show in the Liverpool Biennial official programme, [37] and also that year Dust and Other Stories, a collection of short fiction published by Akerman Daly/Aye-Aye Books, was published. [38] The Rooney Peel session was repeated in 2016 on Gideon Coe's BBC 6 Music show, [39] and in 2017 Rooney's first album for seventeen years, Futile Exorcise, was released on Owd Scrat Records on transparent vinyl. [40] The album was on Stewart Lee's list of best records of 2017 [41] and a track from it, Lost High Street, reached number 1 on the 2017 Festive Fifty (now compiled by Dandelion Radio). [42] Along with further record releases [43] [44] he also began to create sited sound installations in historic locations such as Ripon Courthouse (2019) [45] and Lindisfarne Castle (2022-2023). [46] [47]
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: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (
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: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (
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{{
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: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (
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Paul Rooney | |
---|---|
Born | 1967 (age 56–57) |
Alma mater | |
Occupation | Artist |
Notable work | Lucy Over Lancashire |
Awards | Northern Art Prize (2008) |
Website |
www |
Paul Rooney (born 1967 in Liverpool) is an English artist who works with music and words, primarily through installations and records. [1]
He studied painting at Edinburgh College of Art. [2] In the late 1990s his art practice shifted from painting to video and music, initially with the artist group Common Culture and then the band Rooney. [3] [4] His work later focussed on sound and music within video works, installations and performances. [5] [6] [1]
His art works often explore the difficulties inherent in the representation of place, mixing unreliable narratives of personal experience and urban myth. [7] [4]
Awards include an Abbey Award in Painting at The British School at Rome in 1995, [2] Art Prize North in 2003, [8] [9] the Northern Art Prize in 2008, [10] and the Morton Award for Lens Based Work (2012). [11] His works have been purchased for the Arts Council Collection [12] and through the Contemporary Art Society Acquisitions Scheme. [13]
The three CD music albums released from 1998 to 2000 under the band name Rooney (not the later US band of the same name) [4] [3] were broadcast by BBC Radio 1 ( John Peel Show) amongst others, [14] and the track Went to Town reached number 44 in John Peel's Festive Fifty of 1998. [15] [16] Rooney became a live band in time to record a Peel session in 1999.
Paul Rooney continued to perform or work with other musicians in the early 2000s, such as The NWRA House Band, touring a 'variety night' [17] and a 'rock opera' amongst other performance projects. [18] His gallery works — now primarily sound and music based installations but also including video and writing — developed through commissions for organisations such as Sound and Music [19] and Film and Video Umbrella, [20] and through a period of residencies and fellowships at institutions including Durham University; [2] University of Dundee; [21] Tate Liverpool; [5] Proyecto Batiscafo, Havana; [22] [23] Oxford University; [24] University of Melbourne; [24] and University of Wolverhampton. [5]
Electric Earth: Film and Video from Britain, a British Council exhibition which toured internationally from 2003, included early music/video work by Rooney. [25] In 2004 he curated Pass the Time of Day, a UK touring exhibition dealing with the relationship between music and ' the everyday'. Pass the Time of Day included works by Arab Strap, Rodney Graham and Susan Philipsz amongst others. [26] [27] [16] The following year Rooney's work was selected for the survey show British Art Show 6, [28] which toured the UK in 2005–2006. Rooney had solo shows at venues such as Site Gallery, Sheffield (a two-person show with Susan Philipsz, 2003); [29] and Matt's Gallery, London (2008). [30] [31]
He returned to releasing records in 2007 with the red vinyl 12" Lucy Over Lancashire, on SueMi Records of Berlin. [16] Released under his full name of 'Paul Rooney', it was specifically made for broadcast on BBC Radio Lancashire, [32] but BBC Radio 1 [33] and BBC 6 Music [34] were amongst the other stations who broadcast the piece. [35] [36]
In 2012 Rooney had a solo show in the Liverpool Biennial official programme, [37] and also that year Dust and Other Stories, a collection of short fiction published by Akerman Daly/Aye-Aye Books, was published. [38] The Rooney Peel session was repeated in 2016 on Gideon Coe's BBC 6 Music show, [39] and in 2017 Rooney's first album for seventeen years, Futile Exorcise, was released on Owd Scrat Records on transparent vinyl. [40] The album was on Stewart Lee's list of best records of 2017 [41] and a track from it, Lost High Street, reached number 1 on the 2017 Festive Fifty (now compiled by Dandelion Radio). [42] Along with further record releases [43] [44] he also began to create sited sound installations in historic locations such as Ripon Courthouse (2019) [45] and Lindisfarne Castle (2022-2023). [46] [47]
{{
cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (
link)
{{
cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (
link)
{{
cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (
link)
{{
cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (
link)