insideKENT Magazine Issue 39 - June 2015 | Page 20

ARTS+ENTERTAINMENT L-R: Sex and Drugs and Earthenware, 1995, Glazed ceramic, 54 x 24.5 cms, 21.28 x 9.65 inches Courtesy the Artist and Victoria Miro, London © Grayson Perry; Head of a Fallen Giant, 2008, Bronze, 40 x 50 x 35 cm, 15 3/4 x 19 3/4 x 13 3/4 in, Edition of 5 plus 1 AP , Courtesy the Artist and Victoria Miro, London © Grayson Perry; Spirit Jar, 1994, Glazed ceramic, 46 x 20cm, Arts Council Collection, Southbank Centre, London © Grayson Perry GRAYSON PERRY'S Provincial Punk AT turner contemporary This summer, Turner Contemporary will be presenting a major exhibition of work by the celebrated British artist, Grayson Perry. Provincial Punk, which takes place from 23rd May until 13th September, is a focussed survey exhibition rooted in the development of Grayson Perry’s practice in the early 1980s and the idea of ‘Provincial Punk’ as an anti-elitist and teasingly unfashionable spirit of creativity that has consistently driven his practice. Described as ‘a great chronicler of contemporary life’, Grayson Perry, who won the Turner Prize in 2003, is well known for his beautifully crafted artworks that combine autobiographical reference with wry social commentary on themes ranging from class, taste, consumerism and war, to art versus craft. Turner Contemporary’s Provincial Punk explores Perry’s uniquely subversive practice, from a young artist forging his own artistic language in 1980’s Britain to his status today as one of the mo