Josef O'Connor (born 20 January 1990) is a British Irish artist and curator.[1] His multi-disciplinary works include interactive media and digital content.[2][3] He is the founder and artistic director of CIRCA.[4]
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Josef O'Connor | |
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![]() O'Connor in 2021 | |
Born | (1990-01-20) 20 January 1990 (age 32) London, England |
Nationality | British |
Known for | Artist & Curator |
Notable work | CIRCA |
Website | josefoconnor |
Josef O’Connor was born in 1990 in London, England and sold his first painting at the age of 13.[2] He was educated at Cardinal Vaughan Memorial School and Tiffin Boys School[5] before dropping out at 18 and starting "Pollocks", a digital art platform designed for young creatives to share and discuss their work online.[6][3]
In 2007, O'Connor launched the digital art platform "Pollocks" in an attempt to challenge the traditional gallery model, by providing a virtual space for young creatives to upload and share their work online.[7]
In 2008, starting with the re-appropriation of empty retail space on London's Carnaby Street, O’Connor invited members of the public to contribute to the evolution of "Blank Canvas". The performance ran for two weeks, with live musical performances from Laura Marling[5] and Ladyhawke. Other notable contributors included Annie Lennox, Levi Palmer, Marc Quinn and photographer Rankin.[6] Later in the year, O’Connor exhibited alongside Marlene Dumas as part of the Free Art Fair[8] at The Barbican Centre in London.[3]
Inspired by the Global Financial Crisis, O’Connor presented 'Worthless', a live art installation that parodied the iconic retail giant Woolworths, the public was encouraged to submit their 'worthless' item and have it transformed into a work of art.[9] Once transformed, participants were invited to buy back the works, for the sum of money that they believed it was worth.[3][10][11][5]
To celebrate the Chinese New Year of the Tiger, O’Connor was commissioned to curate a series of art installations across the UK.[12] Developing a concept in response to the elements of the Chinese Zodiac, O'Connor brought together a program that involved site-specific sculpture, performance and musical collaborations with William Orbit and Joe Rush. The project launched with O’Connor commissioning Creatmosphere to light up Brighton's iconic West Pier with 3D mapping and laser technology.[13] The structure was illuminated by computer controlled laser drawings to make it appear and disappear on the horizon. The image of the illuminated pier featured on the cover of the Evening Standard and Brighton and Hove Official Calendar, 2010.[14]
In response to the 2010 General Election, O’Connor launched ‘Billbored’- a non-partisan viral art initiative that allowed the general public, artists and designers to submit a digital billboard artwork featuring their personal political slogans and manifestos for change.[15] Designs were projected in a guerilla campaign onto famous London landmarks, including Big Ben, Tate Modern, St Paul's Cathedral and The Bank of England.[16]
To commemorate Summer Solstice in 2010, O’Connor created a large-scale aerial sculpture that was architecturally constructed from over 5,000 helium balloons that were each illuminated by flashing L.E.D lights.[17][18]
In 2012, O'Connor entered into the Gagosian Gallery's 'Spot Challenge'.[19] Utilizing social media with the #AVERAGEJOE hashtag, he crowdfunded £10,000 in a week to fund a trip around the world and making a global community of 286 shareholders the unlikely winners of a Damien Hirst Spot Print.[20] Mirroring a period of extreme disadvantage and political upheaval, O’Connor's multidisciplinary artwork is currently being made into a film.[21][1]
In October 2020,[22] expanding on themes of connectivity and possibility consistent within his practice, O'Connor launched CIRCA,[23] a platform dedicated to showcasing digital art in the public sphere[4] on London's Piccadilly Lights screen.
Every evening at 20:20 GMT, the adverts on Europe's largest billboard were paused for two minutes to take a non-commercial break devoted to art.[23] By pausing commercial adverts, we’re essentially pausing capitalism, and using that time to present new and meaningful ideas to help guide us all forward. The combined screen time on the Piccadilly Lights is worth more than £1m, so it needs to be used wisely. From Ai Weiwei amplifying his activist message to Tony Cokes displaying Elijah McClain’s last words ‘I can’t breathe’, we’ve set out as a platform to create space for two paradigms to coexist and work together to achieve something meaningful.[24]
After initially approaching the site owners, Landsec, via Twitter[23] to propose a one-off project, O'Connor established the digital art platform as a daily incarnation on the iconic billboard screen. The first artist commissioned by Circa to present work on the screen was Ai Weiwei. Circa offers a very important platform for artists to exercise their practice and to reach out to a greater public.[23] The Chinese artist created a 60-minute film that played in 2 minute instalments throughout the month. On the 31 October 2020 a world record was set when O'Connor arranged for Ai Weiwei's 70 minute film to be shown on the screen.[25]
Other artists that have been commissioned by Circa include Cauleen Smith,[26] Eddie Peake,[27] Anne Imhof[27] and Patti Smith[28] who celebrated the 50th anniversary of her first poetry recital at St Mark's in New York with a presentation curated by O'Connor that combined art, music, poetry and prose, and included two recorded performances – one scheduled for midnight on New Year's Eve and another on the day of the US presidential inauguration on 20 January.[29] “Some of the work I did in my bedroom, some in a recording studio and some at my desk,” says Smith, 74 this week. I had to teach myself how to use Photo Booth on my computer and film myself reading a poem. I’m sure there are 14-year-olds who can do this in five minutes but it took me quite a while. But I got there and I’m so proud of myself.[28]
In an interview with The Guardian, Smith described her favourite piece as a reworked version of Peaceable Kingdom, which was planned to be presented on New Year's Eve to commemorate 100 NHS workers who died from Covid. It’s a collaboration with Josef, acknowledging the certain amount of sorrow and great respect to all the people in healthcare who lost their lives in helping others. It’ll be indispersed with a song that speaks to rebuilding our world, she explains.[27] The New Year's Eve event was cancelled[30] due to COVID-19 restrictions and presented online to an audience of 1 million people.
In May 2021, O'Connor commissioned British artist David Hockney to create a digital artwork titled “Remember you cannot look at the sun or death for very long,” The work was shown on a global network of outdoor screens in London's Piccadilly Circus, Times Square in New York and Pendry West Hollywood in LA, Coex K-Pop Square (the largest LED screen in Korea), and Yunika Vision in Tokyo, Japan.[31]
In 2012, O’Connor was selected as one of the Top 25 inspiring talents from London's 1000 most influential people list, in association with Burberry and the Evening Standard.[32]
In 2013, O’Connor was publicly voted into The Guardian's 100 most influential and innovative people working across arts, culture and the creative industries in the UK, alongside artists Jeremy Deller and Mike Nelson.[33]