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The Independent (Free subscription) | 10/14/2008
When Keith Tyson won the Turner Prize in 2002, it was rather as if a wild man had been let loose in the Buckingham Palace Tea Rooms. His art is big, burly, noisy stuff, paintings that seem to aspire to be as tall as the walls of nuclear-power stations, often accompanied by lots of frenzied scribblings we half-break our necks trying to decipher. There is never anything small, dainty,...
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Gossip Central (Free subscription) | 09/05/2008
The sculptures littering the floor of PaceWildenstein's 22 Street Gallery in Lego colored red, yellow, blue, green, black and white have the feel of sophisticated toys. At the crowded opening reception, a visitor could easily knock a block across the room—no big deal! British artist Keith Tyson simply sent Marc Glimcher an equation and the show was set. Read Glimcher's excellent catalogue...
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The Telegraph (Free subscription) | 10/12/2008
... made her name showing left-field conceptual pieces by artists such as the Turner Prize-winning Keith Tyson ('I just had the sweetest phone call from Keith thanking me for selling so many of his works,' she tells me), the influential Illinois-born artist Dan Graham (Corrias secured the highest price ever for one of his works) and the distinguished British sculptor Anish Kapoor....