fbpx Douglas Gordon, Cupid, Dolls, Stud and Queen | CIRCA

Cupid, Dolls, Stud and Queen

Douglas Gordon

from £250

About this work

Edition details

Publication information

Payment & delivery
Public impact

Douglas Gordon

Douglas Gordon is one of the most influential artists of his generation, internationally recognised for a practice that explores memory, time, identity and perception. Working across film, installation, photography, text, sound and sculpture, he has spent more than three decades challenging how we experience images and narratives, creating works that unsettle familiar ways of seeing and understanding the world.

Born in Glasgow in 1966, Gordon emerged as a leading figure in contemporary art during the 1990s through works that manipulated existing films, cultural icons and collective memories. His celebrated installations often stretch, fragment or repeat moments in time, encouraging viewers to reconsider how meaning is constructed through duration, repetition and context. Throughout his career, he has drawn upon sources ranging from cinema and literature to popular culture and religion, creating works that are both intellectually rigorous and emotionally resonant.

In 2022, Gordon collaborated with CIRCA on if when why what, a major public commission that transformed screens across London, Berlin, Melbourne, Milan, New York and Seoul into luminous meditations on language, desire and memory. Presented in conjunction with Douglas Gordon: Neon Ark at Gagosian, the project drew inspiration from Soho’s historic relationship with neon signs and the culture of discovery, seduction and possibility they once represented. Through a series of newly created neon works, Gordon reimagined public space as a site of reflection, bringing the atmosphere of the city street into dialogue with the artist’s enduring fascination with words, meaning and human connection.

Winner of the Turner Prize in 1996, Gordon has exhibited extensively at institutions including The Museum of Modern Art, New York; Tate Britain and Tate Liverpool; the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington D.C.; Hayward Gallery, London; and Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles. His acclaimed collaborations extend beyond the gallery, including the feature film Zidane: A 21st Century Portrait (2006), created with Philippe Parreno, which redefined the possibilities of both documentary and portraiture.

Across every medium he employs, Gordon’s work invites viewers to question certainty, embrace ambiguity and recognise the instability of memory itself. Through a practice that continues to reshape contemporary art, he remains one of the defining artistic voices of the past three decades.

 

View more

Subscribe to our newsletter

Subscription successful

An error occurred