City Park: Strolling, Turning, Kneeling
About this artwork
This work is one of a series in which the artist was inspired by crime scenes, after seeing a display in the Police Museum in Glasgow. The display consisted of drops of blood on pieces of paper. Its label explained how it was possible to measure the drops and so calculate what had caused them. Borland was interested in how an entire scenario could be constructed from such minimal information. The photographs in this piece recall the style of police photographs that objectively record a crime scene, while the melons remind us of human flesh. Melons are also often used in the making of films for shooting practice.
Updated before 2020
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artist:Christine BorlandScottish (born 1965)
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title:City Park: Strolling, Turning, Kneeling
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date created:1997
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materials:Six colour photographs mounted on board [edition of three]
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measurements:Each: 25.50 x 25.50 cm (framed: 84.00 x 116.50 x 2.50 cm)
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object type:
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credit line:Purchased with the Iain Paul Fund 2000
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accession number:GMA 4320
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gallery:
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artwork photographed by:Antonia Reeve
Christine Borland
Christine Borland
Borland was born in Darvel, Ayrshire and studied at Glasgow School of Art and the University of Ulster, Belfast. Her work has often involved collaboration with non-art related institutions, exploring areas such as forensic science, the history of medicine, medical ethics and human genetics. Borland...