Cut Out Tiles thumbnail 1
Not currently on display at the V&A

Cut Out Tiles

Tile
2015-2016 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This is one of a collection of objects in the V&As collection made by members of the Granby Workshop, a social enterprise created in Liverpool by the collective Assemble. In 2015, with the Granby Four Streets project, of which the Granby Workshop plays the most significant and highest profile constituent, Assemble won Britain’s most prestigious art award, the Turner Prize.


Object details

Category
Object type
TitleCut Out Tiles (assigned by artist)
Materials and techniques
Glazed ceramic tile: straight edged, free-cut or torn shapes of ceramic decal paper were soaked in water and collaged onto individual tiles. The tiles were then fired overnight in a kiln to bond the decal paper to the tile.
Brief description
Granby Workshop; ceramic tile 'Cut Out Tiles', 2015-2016
Physical description
White tile with coloured free form shapes stuck on.
Dimensions
  • Height: 14.6cm (Note: In the catalogued the measurment is noted as 15cm )
  • Width: 14.6cm (Note: In the catalogued the measurment is noted as 15cm )
Content description
The tiles are inspired by vegetation or spontaneously random - the design on each tile is different, and characteristic of its maker. Intermingled with plain ones, these tiles are ideal for the bathroom and suitable for other interior domestic applications. Arrange them in a grided pattern or scatter randomly; unexpected connections emerge over time!

Information on Tiles from Granby Workshop, Catalogue 2015.
Style
Production typesmall batch
Summary
This is one of a collection of objects in the V&As collection made by members of the Granby Workshop, a social enterprise created in Liverpool by the collective Assemble. In 2015, with the Granby Four Streets project, of which the Granby Workshop plays the most significant and highest profile constituent, Assemble won Britain’s most prestigious art award, the Turner Prize.
Collection
Accession number
CD.130-2016

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Record createdApril 4, 2016
Record URL
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