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Douglas Gordon
Douglas Gordon
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Douglas Gordon (born 20 September 1966) is a Scottish artist. He won the Turner Prize in 1996, the Premio 2000 at the 47th Venice Biennale in 1997 and the Hugo Boss Prize in 1998. He lives and works in Berlin, Germany.

Key Information

Work

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Much of Gordon's work is seen as being about memory and uses repetition in various forms. He uses material from the public realm and also creates performance-based videos. His work often overturns traditional uses of video by playing with time elements and employing multiple monitors.[1]

Monster, 1996–7, colour photograph by Douglas Gordon, Private collection

Gordon has often reused older film footage in his photographs and videos.[2] One of his best-known art works is 24 Hour Psycho (1993) which slows down Alfred Hitchcock's film Psycho so that it lasts twenty four hours.[3][4] In Between Darkness and Light (After William Blake) (1997), William Friedkin's Exorcist (1973) and Henry King's The Song of Bernadette (1943) – two films about adolescent girls driven by external forces[5] – are projected on either side of a single free-standing semi-transparent screen so they can be seen simultaneously.[6] The video installation left is right and right is wrong and left is wrong and right is right (1999) presents two projections of Otto Preminger's Whirlpool (1949) side by side, with the one on the right reversed so that the two sides mirror each other; by digital means, Gordon separated individual frames of the original film so that odd-numbered ones on one side alternate with even-numbered ones on the other.[6] Feature Film (1999) is a projection of Gordon's own film of James Conlon conducting Bernard Herrmann's score to Vertigo, thus drawing attention to the film score and the emotional responses it creates in the viewer. In one installation, this was placed at the top of a tall building, referencing one of the film's main plot points. In Through a looking glass (1999), Gordon created a double-projection work around the climactic 71-second scene in Martin Scorsese's film Taxi Driver (1976), in which the main character addresses the camera; the screens are arranged so that the character seems to be addressing himself.[2] At first, the 71-second loops are in sync, but they get progressively out and then progressively back with each repetition of the whole, hourlong program.[7]

Originally conceived as a site-specific video projection for Gagosian Gallery in Chelsea,[8] Play Dead; Real Time (2003) consists of two videos projected on two large screens showing a circus elephant named Minnie ponderously performing for an off-screen trainer in the empty, spacious, white-walled gallery room. In each projection the camera circles as the elephant walks around, lies down to play dead and gets up.[6] The footage showing Minnie's sequences of tricks is simultaneously presented in a front and a rear life-sized projection and on a monitor, with each one depicting the same event from a range of perspectives, including close-ups of the animal's eyes.[9] Gordon also made a film about Zinedine Zidane, Zidane, un portrait du 21e siècle (2006), an idea first seen in a film by Hellmuth Costard, who, in 1970, made a film about George Best titled Football as Never Before. The feature-length film, which he co-directed with fellow artist Philippe Parreno and assembled from footage shot by seventeen synchronised cameras placed around the stadium in real time over the course of a single match,[10] premiered outside the competition of the 2006 Cannes Film Festival before screenings at numerous international venues. k.364 premiered at the Venice Film Festival in September 2010.[11]

Gordon has also made photographs, often in series with relatively minor variations between each individual piece. His Blind Stars (2002) featured publicity photographs of mid-century movie stars in which the sitters' eyes were replaced by expressionless black, white or mirrored surfaces.[12]

In 2010, Gordon collaborated with Rufus Wainwright, creating the visuals for his tour which accompany Rufus' All Days Are Nights: Songs for Lulu album. In Phantom (2011), another collaboration with Wainwright, Gordon employs slow-motion film produced with a high-speed Phantom camera focusing on Wainright's eye – blackened with make-up, weeping, and glaring back at the viewer, echoing melodramatic performances by stars of the silent screen.[13]

Other activities

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In 2008, Gordon was a member of the Official Competition Jury at the 65th Venice International Film Festival. He was also a member of the jury that selected Hito Steyerl as recipient of the Käthe Kollwitz Prize in 2019.[14]

Exhibitions

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Gordon's first solo show was in 1986. In 1993, he exhibited 24 Hour Psycho in the spaces of Tramway, Glasgow, and at Kunst-Werke Institute for Contemporary Art, Berlin. The Berlin show was curated by Klaus Biesenbach. In 1996, Gordon was one of the artists invited to Skulptur Projekte Münster,[15] and in 1997 he represented Britain at the Venice Biennale. His work was the subject of a 2001 retrospective organised by the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, which travelled to the Vancouver Art Gallery, Canada; Museo Rufino Tamayo, Mexico City; and the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C. In 2005, he put together an exhibition at the Deutsche Guggenheim, Berlin called The Vanity of Allegory. In 2006, Douglas Gordon Superhumanatural opened at the National Galleries of Scotland complex in Edinburgh, being Gordon's first major solo exhibition in Scotland since he presented 24 Hour Psycho in 1993. Also in 2006, the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York showed a retrospective of Gordon's work, called Timeline, which was curated by Klaus Biesenbach.[16][17] Another 2006 retrospective was on view at the Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg, Germany, and the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh.[18] A survey of his textworks was shown at Tate Britain, London in 2010. Retrospective solo exhibitions were shown at Museum für Moderne Kunst, Frankfurt am Main in 2011 to 2012, Tel Aviv Museum of Art in 2013 and at the Australian Centre for Contemporary Art in Melbourne in 2014. Further solo exhibitions have been held at Museum Folkwang, Essen, Germany 2013, Musée D'art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, 2014. Gordon took part in the Biennale of Sydney 2014 and Documenta 17. In 2019, his works were exhibited at the Arsenale Institute for Politics of Representation, Venice, during the show Hey Psycho!.

Collections

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Gallery versions of Zidane, un portrait du 21e siècle (2006) were purchased by the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art and the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York.[19][20] The Guggenheim collection also include Through a Looking Glass (1999) and Tattoo (for Reflection) by Gordon.[21] Several photographs and video installations are in the Migros Museum for contemporary art in Zürich.,[22] in the Tate collection,[23] National Galleries of Scotland,[citation needed] Musée D'art Moderne de la Ville de Paris.[24] Play Dead; Real Time (2003) is co-owned by MMK Frankfurt and Hirschhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden Collection.[25] His colour photograph Monster (1996–7) is in the permanent collection of the Honolulu Museum of Art.[26]

Awards

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References

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Further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Douglas Gordon (born 20 September 1966) is a based in , renowned for his installations, films, and photographs that manipulate cinematic footage to interrogate themes of , , and identity. Born in , , Gordon studied and at the from 1984 to 1988, followed by postgraduate studies at the in from 1988 to 1990. He emerged in the early with innovative works that repurposed popular films, slowing or looping sequences to disrupt narrative flow and viewer expectations, as seen in his breakthrough piece 24 Hour Psycho (1993), which extended Alfred Hitchcock's thriller Psycho to a 24-hour duration by reducing it to two frames per second. This approach, often involving dual projections or altered perceptions, draws from film history, , and collective cultural imagery to explore psychological and existential conditions. Gordon's international acclaim includes major awards such as the in 1996 for his video installation , the Premio 2000 at the 47th in 1997, the Prize in 1998, the Käthe Kollwitz Prize in 2012, and appointment as Commander of the Order of Arts and Letters in 2017. Notable collaborations and projects further define his oeuvre, including the co-directed feature film Zidane: A Twenty-First-Century Portrait (2006) with Philippe Parreno, which captured the footballer through multiple camera angles, and site-specific installations like Play Dead; Real Time (2003) featuring a live in a darkened gallery. His practice spans video, photography, sculpture, text, and performance, frequently exhibited at institutions such as , the Guggenheim Museum, and the , emphasizing the relational dynamics between audience, medium, and meaning, with recent exhibitions including a 2025 retrospective at in .

Early life and education

Upbringing in Glasgow

Douglas Gordon was born on 20 September 1966 in , , into a working-class family. Although born in Glasgow, he grew up in the nearby town of . As the eldest of four children, he was raised primarily by his mother, a , while his father worked long hours as a pattern-maker in the city's shipyards, reflecting the industrial labor roots of post-war Glasgow. Gordon's early years were shaped by his family's involvement with the community, after his mother converted from the when he was four years old. This religious environment imposed strict routines, including thrice-weekly meetings and door-to-door preaching, alongside prohibitions on holidays, birthdays, and certain secular media like popular music shows. His mother's limited reading material—primarily the and a biography of —further underscored the household's insular, faith-centered worldview. From a young age, Gordon developed a fascination with cinema and , drawn to films that explored psychological duality and illusion. His conceptual approach was also influenced by on identity and morality, including Robert Louis Stevenson's The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and James Hogg's The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner, as well as the apocalyptic imagery from teachings that permeated his childhood. These elements fostered an early interest in blending high and low cultural forms, setting the foundation for his later artistic explorations. In adulthood, Gordon relocated to , which became his primary residence and workspace, though he maintained ties to . He later transitioned to formal education at the .

Artistic training

Douglas Gordon began his formal artistic education at the in 1984, where he pursued a degree in and , completing it in 1988. The program emphasized site-specific interventions and interdisciplinary approaches, encouraging students to create works responsive to their environments and contexts. During this period, Gordon's childhood fascination with cinema, stemming from his upbringing near , began to inform his explorations in three-dimensional and spatial media. Following his undergraduate studies, Gordon enrolled in the postgraduate program at the , , from 1988 to 1990, earning a degree. At the , he delved deeper into experimental media, particularly cinema and film, honing techniques that blended traditional with time-based elements. This phase marked a pivotal shift, allowing him to integrate projection and temporal manipulation into his practice, laying the groundwork for his signature installations. As a student at , Gordon engaged in early projects that experimented with time, projection, and perceptual distortion, often using rudimentary video setups to challenge spatial boundaries in environmental contexts. These experiments, influenced by the department's focus on performance and site-responsive art, foreshadowed his later video works. Key mentors, including lecturers in the department such as David Harding, along with peers like Craig Millar, played a crucial role in guiding his transition from toward video and performance-based practices. The collaborative Glasgow art scene of the late 1980s further reinforced this evolution, fostering performance-oriented exchanges that expanded his conceptual toolkit.

Artistic practice

Core themes

Douglas Gordon's artistic practice is fundamentally shaped by explorations of duality, manifesting in motifs such as , , and the self versus the other, often evoked through concepts like doppelgangers and mirrors that underscore psychological fragmentation and identity conflicts. These dualities draw from existential dialectics, positioning the viewer in a space of tension between opposing forces, where innocence confronts guilt and light battles darkness, reflecting broader ethical struggles inherent in human experience. Central to Gordon's oeuvre is the manipulation of time and , which he employs to probe psychological and existential dilemmas, altering perceptions of duration and recollection to reveal the fragility of personal and shared narratives. This thematic focus examines how constructs identity while simultaneously distorting it, inviting contemplation on the passage of time as both a linear progression and a cyclical trap that amplifies inner conflicts. Gordon's themes are profoundly influenced by cinema and , which inform his engagement with repetition and psychological tension, creating layered narratives that echo literary doppelganger traditions and cinematic loops to heighten emotional and perceptual unease. Techniques such as video looping briefly embody these motifs by extending temporal experiences, reinforcing the repetitive structures drawn from these sources. Over time, Gordon's thematic concerns have evolved from intimate psychological explorations of individual in his earlier works to broader social commentaries on and ethical quandaries in . This progression reflects a deepening interest in how personal dualities intersect with communal histories, addressing moral ambiguities in contemporary contexts without abandoning the core existential inquiries.

Techniques and media

Douglas Gordon primarily employs video projection and looping techniques to manipulate the perception of time in his installations. By slowing down or extending the duration of found footage, such as in 24 Hour Psycho (1993), where Alfred Hitchcock's film is stretched from 110 minutes to 24 hours at two frames per second and looped continuously on a suspended screen, Gordon alters the viewer's temporal experience. This method, often using large-scale projections or multiple monitors, creates immersive environments that encourage prolonged engagement, as seen in Pretty much every film and video work from about 1992 until now . . . (1999–ongoing), which assembles 94 films across 109 screens in a looped multimedia setup. These approaches draw on cinematic ready-mades, re-editing existing material to reveal psychological and perceptual layers. Gordon integrates text, mirrors, and found objects into site-specific installations to enhance interactivity and duality. Text elements, like the ongoing List of Names (1990–), appear as wall inscriptions listing personal encounters, transforming gallery spaces into reflective archives. Mirrors feature prominently for reversal effects, as in Through a Looking Glass (1999), where dual projections of a Taxi Driver monologue on angled screens create desynchronized, mirrored images that disorient the viewer. Found objects, including sculptures or burnt photographs, are incorporated for tactile contrast, such as in Self-Portrait of You + Me (9 piece QEII) (2008), combining mirrored surfaces with altered celebrity images. These elements foster site-responsive works that blend the physical and optical. Collaborations with film directors and musicians expand Gordon's hybrid media explorations, merging disciplines into performative installations. He partnered with director Philippe Parreno on Zidane: A 21st Century (2006), using multiple camera angles and looped footage to portrait the athlete in real time. Similarly, musical collaborations include projections synchronized with Rufus Wainwright's performances during the All Days Are Nights: Songs for Lulu tour (2010), integrating live sound with video. With conductor for (1999), Gordon filmed a live Vertigo score rendition, projecting it mirrored across dual screens to hybridize and performance. Gordon's practice evolved from sculpture during his education at the (1984–1988) to digital and performative media in his mature work. Initially trained in , he shifted toward video and text-based interventions at the (1990), embracing non-traditional formats like Super 8 transfers to digital in I Had Nowhere to Go (2016). This transition, evident in performative pieces such as Play Dead; Real Time (2003) featuring a live in a gallery space, underscores his move to time-based and immersive digital forms over static sculpture.

Major works

Early installations

Douglas Gordon emerged as a key figure in 's vibrant art scene during the , a period marked by a cultural that positioned the city as a hub for innovative contemporary practice, fueled by artist-run spaces like Transmission Gallery and major venues such as Tramway. This boom, often dubbed the "Glasgow Miracle," provided fertile ground for young artists like Gordon, who returned to the city in 1990 after studies in and quickly integrated into a community emphasizing experimental media and conceptual depth. One of Gordon's breakthrough pieces from this era was the text-based installation Meaning and Location (1990), first shown at University College London. In this work, Gordon printed a passage from St. Luke's Gospel twice on the wall, altering the second instance with a misplaced comma that shifted its semantic meaning—from an immediate promise of paradise ("Truly I say to you, today you will be with me in paradise") to one where the promise is made today but paradise is in the future ("Truly I say to you today, you will be with me in paradise"). This subtle intervention highlighted themes of identity, perception, and the fragility of language in constructing personal and contextual understanding, inviting viewers to confront how small changes can redefine interpretation. Gordon's reputation solidified with (1993), a seminal that debuted at Tramway in . Here, he appropriated Alfred Hitchcock's classic film Psycho (1960), slowing its 109-minute runtime to exactly 24 hours through meticulous frame-by-frame manipulation and projection looping, creating a hypnotic, rear-projected loop devoid of sound. The piece compelled viewers to engage with fragmented narratives and suspended time, exposing subconscious memories and psychological tension embedded in the original footage while underscoring the viewer's role in reconstructing meaning. First exhibited in Tramway's vast industrial space, it exemplified Gordon's early mastery of temporal distortion to probe identity and recollection, marking his transition from text to immersive media.

Film and video projects

Gordon's engagement with Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho (1960) extended beyond his seminal 1993 installation , where he slowed the film to a 24-hour duration, into a series of appropriations exploring psychological tension and cultural memory. In 2007, he created Lost but found, Psycho Hitchhiker (Coming or Going), a photographic work that reimagines the film's iconic imagery through a hitchhiking figure, blending with themes of uncertainty and direction. These extensions often emphasize repetition and looping, altering viewer perception of time and narrative familiarity. A significant collaboration came in 2006 with French artist Philippe Parreno on Zidane: A 21st Century Portrait, a multi-angle video portrait of French footballer Zinédine Zidane during a real-time match against Villarreal CF. Filmed using seventeen synchronized cameras around the Santiago Bernabéu Stadium, the work splices live broadcast footage with raw camera feeds, projecting dual channels to create a hypnotic, psychological study of celebrity and performance. The 90-minute piece, scored by Mogwai, draws parallels to historical portraits by Goya and Velázquez while critiquing media mediation of sports icons. In 2022, Gordon presented k.364 at Contemporary Arts, a two-channel HD video originally conceived in 2010 that intertwines personal narrative with . The work follows Israeli musicians Roi Shiloah (violinist) and Avri Levitan (violist) of Polish-Jewish descent—on journey from to , evoking their grandparents' 1930s flight from amid rising . Interwoven is a performance of Mozart's Sinfonia Concertante in E-flat Major, K. 364 (1779) at Warsaw's National Philharmonic, with fragmented visuals and audio mirroring the disjointed nature of inherited memory and European history. Running 50 minutes and 33 seconds with mirrored elements, it probes themes of displacement and musical solace. Post-2020 projects further integrated video with light in immersive installations. Neon Ark (2023), shown at Gagosian , featured neon text sculptures inspired by film scripts and , alongside the if when why what (2018–22), a three-minute projection broadcast globally at 20:22 nightly in December 2022, questioning temporality through illuminated phrases. Complementing this, Burning Stars (2023) at Galerie Mennour in incorporated a single-monitor video work without sound, lasting 14 minutes and 17 seconds, alongside fire-damaged images of Hollywood icons from the Warhol era, evoking destruction and cinematic legacy through light and projected imagery. In 2024, Gordon's exhibition All I need is a little bit of everything at Gagosian in London presented multilingual text works and an encyclopedic installation of over 82 films on more than 100 screens, exploring Soho's erotic entertainment history and existential themes through expanded video and text elements. That year also saw the launch of the public video installation undergroundoverheard (2023) at Tottenham Court Road Elizabeth line station in London, featuring a looped digital screen with short textual statements reflecting Soho's vibrant culture. A major retrospective, Pretty much every film and video work from about 1992 until now'ish…, opened at MAXXI in Rome on May 30, 2025, showcasing his comprehensive video oeuvre up to contemporary pieces as of 2025.

Exhibitions

Solo exhibitions

Douglas Gordon's first major solo exhibition took place at Tramway in Glasgow in 1993, where he presented 24 Hour Psycho, a seminal video installation that slowed Alfred Hitchcock's film Psycho (1960) to a 24-hour duration, marking his early exploration of time manipulation and psychological tension. This show established Gordon's reputation for transforming familiar media into immersive, durational experiences, drawing international attention to his practice. In 2006, Gordon's retrospective Timeline at the (MoMA) in New York showcased his time-based works from the onward, including projections and installations that altered perceptions of duration and narrative, such as extended versions of classic films and mirrored projections. Organized by , the exhibition ran from June 11 to September 4 and highlighted Gordon's evolution in sculpting time through video and film, featuring pieces like Play Dead; Real Time (2003). Gordon's 2010 solo exhibition at in , held from February 16 to May 23, delved into themes of duality, identity, and psychological through a range of installations, photographs, and text works that juxtaposed opposites like light and shadow or self and other. The show included pieces such as I am the curator of my own misery (2010), emphasizing Gordon's interest in the fragmented self and moral binaries. More recently, Gordon presented Neon Ark at Gagosian in from April 6 to May 20, 2023, his first gallery show devoted entirely to text works produced in an on-site workshop, drawing from dialogue, song lyrics, and personal phrases to evoke emotional resonance under glowing . In 2024, All I Need Is a Little Bit of Everything at Gagosian, Grosvenor Hill, , from February 1 to March 15, featured multilingual text-based works, sculptures, and projections exploring existential themes through fragmented narratives and Soho-inspired imagery. That year, a of his collaborative Zidane, un portrait du XXIe siècle (2006) was held at the from October 10 to 13, focusing on the work's innovative multi-camera portraiture of the footballer. In 2025, the retrospective Pretty much every and video work from about 1992 until now'ish opened at in on May 30, running through November 23, surveying his extensive time-based media practice in a comprehensive installation across the museum's galleries.

Group exhibitions

Douglas Gordon's participation in group exhibitions has underscored his dialogue with broader narratives, from national representations to thematic surveys of media and . These collective showcases have positioned his time-based works alongside those of historical and international peers, amplifying his exploration of , , and cultural symbols within global contexts. A pivotal moment came with his selection to represent Britain at the 47th in 1997, where he presented installations that engaged with the event's international scope and earned him the Premio 2000. This biennale appearance not only highlighted Gordon's innovative approach to film and video but also facilitated his integration into worldwide art discourses, fostering collaborations and critical acclaim across and beyond. Earlier, in 1996, Gordon featured in the exhibition at , where his video works, including slowed-down projections, were displayed alongside shortlisted artists, drawing attention to emerging British multimedia practices. The exhibition's platform at emphasized collective innovation in , situating Gordon's contributions within a national yet forward-looking curatorial framework. In more recent years, Gordon has continued to engage in group contexts that bridge historical and modern aesthetics. His inclusion in "Icons" at the Boghossian Foundation's Villa Empain in Brussels in 2021 placed his photographic and textual pieces amid ancient European and Middle Eastern artifacts as well as works by artists like Duane Hanson and Titus Kaphar, examining the sacralization of images across eras. Similarly, the 2020 exhibition "Broadcast: Alternate Meanings in Film and Video" at Gagosian in New York featured Gordon's video installations, such as Domestic (as long as it lasts) (2002), alongside pieces by Chris Burden and Sterling Ruby, reflecting on immediacy and external influences in time-based media during a period of global uncertainty. Gordon's works also appeared in "Andy Warhol's Long Shadow" at Gagosian in in 2024, a group show curated to explore Warhol's enduring impact through contemporary lenses, including contributions from artists addressing fame, repetition, and cultural legacy. In 2025, his video works were included in "Stadi: Architecture of a Myth" at in (May 30–November 9), alongside contemporary artists examining the interplay of architecture, myth, and media in public spaces. These biennale and gallery-based group exhibitions have collectively enhanced Gordon's visibility in international circuits, reinforcing his role in evolving conversations around visual and temporal manipulation in .

Awards and recognition

Key awards

Douglas Gordon received the Turner Prize in 1996, marking the first time the award was given to an artist primarily working in film and video. The prize recognized his innovative installation 24 Hour Psycho (1993), which slowed Alfred Hitchcock's film Psycho to run over 24 hours, alongside his broader practice of manipulating time and perception in media works. This win significantly boosted Gordon's profile, establishing him as a leading figure in contemporary video art and leading to increased international exhibitions. In 1997, Gordon was awarded the Premio 2000 at the 47th , an honor shared with artists and for emerging talents. The award highlighted his contributions to time-based media during his participation in the Biennale, further solidifying his reputation for experimental installations that challenge narrative conventions. This recognition expanded his opportunities in European art scenes, influencing subsequent projects in major institutions. Gordon won the Hugo Boss Prize in 1998 from the , a $50,000 award that celebrated his pioneering use of video to explore themes of identity, , and psychological tension. The prize focused on his ability to transform existing films into immersive experiences, such as through looped and altered projections, and included a solo exhibition at the Guggenheim. This accolade propelled his career globally, attracting commissions and collaborations that emphasized his multimedia approach. In 2012, Gordon was awarded the Käthe Kollwitz Prize by the Akademie der Künste in , recognizing his significant impact on through video, , and installation works that address human and . Valued at €12,000, the prize honored a body of work that combined sculpture-like media elements with narrative disruption, and it was accompanied by an exhibition at the Akademie. This later honor underscored his enduring influence on contemporary and media, reinforcing his status in German and international circles.

Other honors

In 1997, Gordon participated in the DAAD Artists-in- Program, a prestigious residency that supported his relocation to and influenced subsequent works through its emphasis on interdisciplinary exchange. Additional honors include his appointment as Commandeur dans l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the French Ministry of Culture in 2012, recognizing his contributions to visual and performative arts. In 2016, Gordon was awarded the Efebo d'Oro Prize in for his narrative-driven film works. Gordon was also shortlisted for the Royal Philharmonic Society Music Awards in the creative communication category in 2012 for his film installation k.364. In 2018, he was elected a Corresponding Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, acknowledging his impact on Scottish cultural production. Recent acknowledgments include his commission for the public artwork undergroundoverheard (2023), installed at in in 2024, affirming his ongoing influence in site-specific interventions.

Collections

Public collections

Gordon's video installations form a significant part of the and collections in , including works such as Play Dead; Real Time (this way, that way, the other way) (2003) and (1999), which explore themes of time and through manipulated film projections. These holdings highlight the institutions' commitment to Gordon's innovative approach to media art, making his pieces accessible to the public for ongoing study and appreciation. The in New York holds several of Gordon's works, such as (1993), Tattoo (for Reflection) (1997), and the collaborative film (2006) with Philippe Parreno, emphasizing his exploration of identity and duality in public view. In Scotland, the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art in features pieces like List of Names (Random) (after 1990, ongoing) and Monster (1996–1997) as part of its contemporary holdings and the joint ARTIST ROOMS collection with , ensuring national representation of Gordon's conceptual practice. The Centre Pompidou in Paris maintains works including Untitled (I'm Not Sure This Is Working) (1997) in its collection, reflecting Gordon's international reach and the museum's focus on new media.

Private collections

Several of Douglas Gordon's works are held in prominent private collections, contributing to his visibility in the art market through occasional loans to public exhibitions and high-profile sales. The Pinault Collection, assembled by French billionaire François Pinault and linked to his Kering foundation, includes key pieces such as the 2008 installation Through a Looking Glass, which was first exhibited from the collection in 2008 at the Tri Postal in Lille as part of the "Passage du Temps" show. Auction records underscore the demand for Gordon's editions and photographs among private buyers, particularly those derived from his Hitchcock-inspired "Psycho" series. For instance, editions from the 1993 Psycho Hitchhiker series—a set of 10 black-and-white photographs depicting the artist as a hitchhiker referencing Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho—have appeared at major houses like and , with comparable Gordon photographs fetching up to six figures in recent years. Private holdings have enhanced public access to Gordon's oeuvre via loans to institutional exhibitions. In the 2005 Deutsche Guggenheim show The Vanity of Allegory, curated by Gordon, several works were borrowed from private collections alongside Guggenheim loans, allowing broader engagement with his conceptual explorations of and . Post-2020, emerging collectors have acquired Gordon's limited editions through private sales and auctions, reflecting sustained market interest. A notable example is the 2023 private sale of the screenprint Larger Than Life, Life Size, Smaller Than Life, part of a consigned collection of over 2,000 works, signaling Gordon's appeal to new private patrons.

Other activities

Curatorial and jury roles

Douglas Gordon has served in prominent jury roles within the international art and film communities, leveraging his expertise in time-based media to evaluate works by emerging and established artists. In 2008, he was a member of the Official Competition Jury for the 65th Venice International Film Festival, where he contributed to the selection of outstanding international films alongside jurors including , , and others. In 2019, Gordon participated as a jury member for the Käthe Kollwitz Prize, awarded by the Akademie der Künste in Berlin, evaluating contemporary artists' submissions with fellow committee members Katharina Grosse and Ulrike Lorenz; the prize was ultimately granted to Hito Steyerl for her influential video and installation works. Gordon's curatorial contributions have emphasized the integration of video art into group exhibitions, often advising on inclusions that highlight perceptual and temporal manipulations. A notable example is his 2005 project The VANITY of Allegory at the Deutsche Guggenheim in Berlin, which he curated as a conceptual "group exhibition" featuring works by artists such as Joseph Beuys, John Baldessari, and Bruce Nauman—though all pieces were recontextualized elements from Gordon's own practice, including video installations that blurred authorship and medium boundaries.

Collaborations and teaching

Gordon has engaged in numerous collaborations across disciplines, often blending his video and installation practice with performance, music, and . One of his most prominent partnerships is with French artist Philippe Parreno on the 2006 feature Zidane: A 21st Century Portrait, which captures the French footballer during a single match using 17 synchronized cameras to create a multi-perspective portrait exploring themes of heroism and isolation. This project, exhibited at venues like the Van Abbemuseum in 2009, exemplifies Gordon's interest in slowing down and fragmenting time in popular media. In music and performance, Gordon collaborated with Canadian singer-songwriter on the 2011 installation Phantom, featuring two Steinway pianos—one burnt—mirrors, Wainwright's music, and ultra-slow-motion footage of the artist, delving into themes of destruction and reflection; it was exhibited at the 19th Biennale of Sydney in 2014. Similarly, his 2014 project Tears become… streams become… with French pianist transformed New York City's Park Avenue Armory's Drill Hall into a flooded stage with 122,000 gallons of water, where Grimaud performed water-themed piano works by composers like Ravel and Debussy, merging with live music to evoke fluidity and emotion. Gordon's interdisciplinary reach extends to film and theater. With actor James Franco, he co-presented the 2013 exhibition Psycho Nacirema at Pace Gallery in London, a multimedia homage to Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho that invited viewers to immerse themselves in the film's tension through installations and performances. Earlier, in the late 1980s, Gordon worked with Scottish artist Craig Richardson on projects like 40 Years (1988) at the Royal Scottish Academy, early experiments in performance and video that marked his emergence in Glasgow's art scene. He has also partnered with fashion designer on graphic T-shirts featuring motifs from his work, such as the 2001 "After Life" skull design, and appeared in her 2013 directorial debut film Je m'appelle Hmmm.... More recently, Gordon created the 2023 video installation undergroundoverheard for London's at , exploring themes of and urban movement. Regarding teaching, Gordon has held the position of professor of film at the Städelschule in since 2010 and continues in this role as of 2025, where he contributes to the education of emerging artists in video and time-based media. Additionally, he has served as a guest lecturer, including at the Iceland Academy of the Arts in 2016 as part of their TALK Series, sharing insights into his practice with students and faculty. These roles reflect his commitment to mentoring within the art community, building on his own training at and the .

References

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