Heather Phillipson is a British artist working in a variety of media including video, sculpture, electronic music, large-scale installations, online works, text and drawing. She was nominated for the Turner Prize in 2022. Her work has been presented at major venues internationally and she has received multiple awards for her artwork, videos and poetry, including the Film LondonJarman Award in 2016.[1] She is also an acclaimed poet whose writing has appeared widely online, in print and broadcast.
Exhibitions
Phillipson has held solo exhibitions at major galleries and locations internationally, including the annual Duveen Galleries commission at Tate Britain in 2021 and the 13th commission for the Fourth Plinth, Trafalgar Square, where her sculpture The End was installed from 2020 to 2022.[2][3]
Phillipson's videos have been screened on BBC Two and Channel 4 television and her audio collages and poems have been broadcast on BBC Radio 3 and BBC Radio 4.
Heather Phillipson was born in 1978 in the borough of Haringey in North London and brought up in Greenwich, South East London. The youngest of three children, her mother was a social worker and feminist activist and her father a teacher, artist, jazz musician and writer. Phillipson and her siblings were raised with an interest in the arts and music and Phillipson, while still a child, was awarded Grade 7 from the ABRSM on both violin and piano. At the age of nine, Phillipson won a London-wide poetry competition for the borough of Lewisham. As a teenager, Phillipson and her family moved to West Wales, where Phillipson attended Ysgol Dyffryn Taf comprehensive school.[4] She later went on to study Art & Design at Pembrokeshire College in the town of Haverfordwest where she also worked part-time in a record shop, building up her collection and knowledge of UK dance and electronic music, which later informed her practice as a DJ, playing house, jungle and drum and bass. Phillipson went on to become active in the late-90s UK rave and free party scene. As Phillipson noted when interviewed on BBC Radio 3's Private Passions in 2020,[5] this has had a significant impact on the sampling, rhythmic and tonal structures of her work.[6]
Personal life
Phillipson lives in Hackney, East London, where her studio is also based.
Since 2016, she has volunteered as a mentor with Arts Emergency, a UK-based charity working to increase access to the arts for 16-19-year-olds from disadvantaged backgrounds.