Now in their 80s, the ‘living sculpture’ couple have built a free gallery to ensure their creations last for ever. Our writer gets a tour of the centre – and its mind-boggling inaugural show

George and Gilbert are showing me the Himalayan magnolia they’ve planted in the freshly cobbled courtyard of the Gilbert and George Centre. It’s a tall specimen that’s already starting to unleash its ravishing red blooms. “Just like human hearts!” they exclaim, adding that the friend who first showed them this tree’s flowers has just died. “It’s amazing,” says George, “that on the day we thought, ‘Let’s take a photograph to send him’, we should hear that he died.”

George Passmore is 81 and his husband Gilbert Prousch is nearly 80. The pair have been working as a piece of living art, a single artistic entity, since the 1960s and are intensely aware of how many people they’ve outlived. “They’ve all gone,” says George. “Duncan’s gone, Warhol’s gone.”

Continue reading…

You May Also Like

George Galloway sworn in as Rochdale MP after byelection victory

Workers party leader meets speaker of House of Commons as parliament returns…

What is the most overhyped cultural artefact of all time?

From Godzilla to Donda via Michael Jackson’s HIStory, entertainment is littered with…

Minnekhada Regional Park

minnekhada fire, coquitlam fire

From bands to podcasts, the cultural offerings online are endless. How can we find the good stuff? | Adrian Chiles

Even the number of ‘best podcasts’ lists is bewildering. Is there just…