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Stephen Willats

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Nationality
  
English

Education
  
Ealing Art College

Role
  
Artist

Name
  
Stephen Willats

Movement
  
Social Practice


Stephen Willats staticguimcouksysimagesGuardianPixpictures

Born
  
1943

Known for
  
Conceptual Art, Social Practice

Notable work
  
West London Social Resource Project

Books
  
Art and Social Function, Beyond the Plan, Street Talk, Artwork as Social Model: A, Stephen Willats: Between

Beth campbell and stephen willats


Stephen Willats (born 1943 in London) is a British artist. He lives and works in London.

Contents

Stephen Willats ArtSlant Stephen Willats

Stephen Willats is a pioneer of conceptual art. Since the early 1960s he has created work concerned with extending the territory in which art functions. His work has involved interdisciplinary processes and theory from sociology, systems analysis, cybernetics, semiotics and philosophy.

Stephen Willats Fraser Muggeridge studio Stephen Willats

Conversations the future of artistic practice the artist as urbanist


Works

Stephen Willats Willats Stephen Lumen Travo Gallery

His multi-media projects often engage visitors to participate in creative social processes. Notable projects include Multiple Clothing (1965–1998), The West London Social Resource Project (1972), and the book Art and Social Function: Three Projects (1976). Willats considers Art and Social Function as a "kind of manual or tool that would be relevant to any artist thinking of enacting different paradigms for an art intervening in the fabric of society".

Stephen Willats BOMB Magazine Sight Mapping Stephen Willats at Victoria

His 1973 work Meta Filter consisted of pairs of participants seated at a computer, attempting to reach an agreement about the meanings of various images and statements.

He has produced a number of extended projects working with residents of public housing estates across Europe. Examples include Pat Purdy and the Glue Sniffers' Club (1981-2), The Kids are in the Street (1981-2) and Are You Good Enough for the Cha Cha Cha? (1982), about, respectively, wasteland outside the Avondale estate in West London, a skateboard park near a Brixton housing estate, and a London punk music club. For Brentford Towers (1985) Willats worked with residents to map the interiors of their homes, identifying objects holding personal significance.

His works are held in the collections of the Tate, the National Portrait Gallery, and the Henry Moore Institute.

References

Stephen Willats Wikipedia