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Surveillance Is Your Busywork
Barbara Kruger is an American conceptual artist and collagist associated with the Pictures Generation. As demonstrated in 'Surveillance is your busywork', Kruger's works are characterised by her collage style that sees black and white images appropriated from billboards and magazines overlaid with captions in white-on-red Futura Bold Oblique or Helvetica Ultra Condensed text.
'Surveillance is your busywork' is an unused subway lithograph placard, produced in the early 80s by Kruger for New York City's Metro Transit Authority. Never before used, the piece is an unusual intact example of Kruger's early 'paste up' works.
Kruger's captions often declare their message to their viewer, even accusing and implicating them through the use of the pronouns "you", "your", "I", "we", and "they". With further notable captions of Kruger's including, "I shop therefore I am" and "Your body is a battleground". Through the techniques of advertisement and mass communication, the artist seeks to address issues of language and sign to explore identity, gender and the relational other.
Original subway poster, c. 1980, on wove paper, unsigned as issued, 280 x 713mm (11 x 28 inches).
Wye, Deborah, 'Thinking Print: Books to Billboards, 1980-95'.
'Surveillance is your busywork' is an unused subway lithograph placard, produced in the early 80s by Kruger for New York City's Metro Transit Authority. Never before used, the piece is an unusual intact example of Kruger's early 'paste up' works.
Kruger's captions often declare their message to their viewer, even accusing and implicating them through the use of the pronouns "you", "your", "I", "we", and "they". With further notable captions of Kruger's including, "I shop therefore I am" and "Your body is a battleground". Through the techniques of advertisement and mass communication, the artist seeks to address issues of language and sign to explore identity, gender and the relational other.
Original subway poster, c. 1980, on wove paper, unsigned as issued, 280 x 713mm (11 x 28 inches).
Wye, Deborah, 'Thinking Print: Books to Billboards, 1980-95'.
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Description
Barbara Kruger is an American conceptual artist and collagist associated with the Pictures Generation. As demonstrated in 'Surveillance is your busywork', Kruger's works are characterised by her collage style that sees black and white images appropriated from billboards and magazines overlaid with captions in white-on-red Futura Bold Oblique or Helvetica Ultra Condensed text.
'Surveillance is your busywork' is an unused subway lithograph placard, produced in the early 80s by Kruger for New York City's Metro Transit Authority. Never before used, the piece is an unusual intact example of Kruger's early 'paste up' works.
Kruger's captions often declare their message to their viewer, even accusing and implicating them through the use of the pronouns "you", "your", "I", "we", and "they". With further notable captions of Kruger's including, "I shop therefore I am" and "Your body is a battleground". Through the techniques of advertisement and mass communication, the artist seeks to address issues of language and sign to explore identity, gender and the relational other.
Original subway poster, c. 1980, on wove paper, unsigned as issued, 280 x 713mm (11 x 28 inches).
Wye, Deborah, 'Thinking Print: Books to Billboards, 1980-95'.
'Surveillance is your busywork' is an unused subway lithograph placard, produced in the early 80s by Kruger for New York City's Metro Transit Authority. Never before used, the piece is an unusual intact example of Kruger's early 'paste up' works.
Kruger's captions often declare their message to their viewer, even accusing and implicating them through the use of the pronouns "you", "your", "I", "we", and "they". With further notable captions of Kruger's including, "I shop therefore I am" and "Your body is a battleground". Through the techniques of advertisement and mass communication, the artist seeks to address issues of language and sign to explore identity, gender and the relational other.
Original subway poster, c. 1980, on wove paper, unsigned as issued, 280 x 713mm (11 x 28 inches).
Wye, Deborah, 'Thinking Print: Books to Billboards, 1980-95'.






