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Acrylic boot print on paper. Signed and dated by the artist. A unique work from a series of 100. Boot by Gavin Turk, created in 2009, is a unique work featuring black acrylic boot prints stamped across a 50 x 50 cm sheet of paper. Known for exploring authorship, identity, and the legacy of conceptual art, Turk transforms a utilitarian imprint into a visual statement. The repetitive boot sole motifs—some clear, others smudged—suggest movement, presence, and trace. Echoing the artist’s interest in absence and persona, Boot evokes ideas of passage, labor, and perhaps the residue of protest or performance. Each print, though mechanically identical in origin, becomes expressive through its slight variations and placement.
Boot, 2009
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50 x 50 cm
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Details
Artist
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Acrylic boot print on paper. Signed and dated by the artist. A unique work from a series of 100. Boot by Gavin Turk, created in 2009, is a unique work featuring black acrylic boot prints stamped across a 50 x 50 cm sheet of paper. Known for exploring authorship, identity, and the legacy of conceptual art, Turk transforms a utilitarian imprint into a visual statement. The repetitive boot sole motifs—some clear, others smudged—suggest movement, presence, and trace. Echoing the artist’s interest in absence and persona, Boot evokes ideas of passage, labor, and perhaps the residue of protest or performance. Each print, though mechanically identical in origin, becomes expressive through its slight variations and placement.
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What is appropriation?
Appropriation in art involves using pre-existing images or objects with little or no modification. This technique has played a significant role across various art forms, including visual arts, music, performance, and literature. In visual arts, appropriation refers to the practice of adopting, sampling, recycling, or borrowing elements—or even entire forms—of existing visual culture, integrating them into new works to create meaning or critique.
