Monk's methods often recall approaches typical of 1960s conceptualism, but without sharing their utopian ideals and notions of artistic genius. Instead, Monk grounds his conceptual approach in more commonplace concerns, that of personal history, his family, even pets, while still alluding to the types of systems that artists such as Sol LeWitt employed so rigorously. While much of his work is gently playful and tinged with nostalgia for the late 1960s, it also challenges the idea of purity in modern art, demystifying the creative process and suggesting alternative models for how art and the role of the artist can be interpreted.
- Director
- Jonathan Monk
- Country of production
- United Kingdom
- Year
- 2005
- Festival Edition
- IFFR 2005
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