Ryan Gander

Ryan Gander OBE (born 1976) is a British artist living and working in Suffolk and London in the UK. Over the past two decades, Gander has established an international reputation through a vast and pluralistic body of artworks that materialise in many different forms, ranging from sculpture, apparel and writing to architecture, painting, typefaces, publications and performance. As well as curating exhibitions, he is a committed educator, having taught at international art institutions and universities, and has written and presented television programmes on and about contemporary art and culture for the BBC.

Gander is typically described as a conceptual artist, but this is a term he has refuted, referring instead to himself as ‘a sort of neo-conceptualist, Proper-“Gander”-ist, amateur philosopher’.[1] Through creative and associative thought processes that connect everyday life and the esoteric, the overlooked and the commonplace, Gander's work involves a questioning of language and knowledge, a reinvention of the modes of appearance and creation of an artwork.[2]

Early life and education

Gander was born in Chester, northwest England, in 1976. His father worked as a planning engineer on the commercial gearbox line at Vauxhall Motors in Ellesmere Port, Liverpool (a fact he would later make work about).[3] Gander's mother worked initially as a teacher and then as an inspector for Her Majesty's Inspectorate of Education. Gander became interested in art after being taken to one of the early British Art Shows by his father.[4]

In 1996 Gander began the BA (Hons) Interactive Arts at Manchester Metropolitan University, graduating with a First Class Degree in 1999. ‘At that time,’ he told the artist Cory Arcangel in a 2018 interview, ‘there weren’t any galleries in Manchester, so I only knew art through magazines and early internet. Dial up stuff, which was quite laborious, and I would have a yearly trip to London to go to the Tate’. ‘I didn’t know where else to go,’ he continued, ‘so I always saw art as an image, a caption, a text about it, a title, a view.’[5]

After graduating from art school he went to work in a carpet shop in Chester before attempting to train as a journalist at North Wales Newspapers. Although employed briefly as a photographer, he was rejected as a journalist because his writing ‘was too bad’. Asked when he knew he wanted to be an artist, Gander replied: ‘I didn't think I’d be an artist. It sounds horrible and crass, but to be totally honest I thought I’d be a TV presenter’.[6]

Between 1999 and 2000 he was an artist-in-residence at the Jan van Eyck Akademie in Maastricht, Netherlands, as a Fine Art Research Participant. In 2001 he participated in the artist residency programme of the Rijksakademie van Beeldende Kunsten in Amsterdam, also in the Netherlands, finishing in 2002. In 2004, he was made Cocheme Fellow at Byam Shaw School of Art, London.

It was winning the 2005 Baloise Art Prize at Art Basel for the presentation of his video work Is this Guilt in You Too (The Study of a Car in a Field) that launched Gander's career as an artist. The cash prize of CHF 30,000 enabled him to quit three part-time teaching posts to concentrate on his practice.[7]

Later, in 2015, Gander was presented the award of Doctor of Arts by Manchester Metropolitan University, Honoris Causa, and made an honorary graduate of the University of Suffolk in 2017. In 2019, he was awarded the Hodder Fellowship at Princeton University.[8]

Work

Ryan Gander's body of work is vast and pluralistic. As the critic Philipp Hindahl wrote in Mousse Magazine: ‘Gander creates output so diverse that it sometimes is impossible to tell if you are seeing a show by the British artist or a well-curated group show.’[9] His work can be reminiscent of a puzzle, a network with multiple connections, the fragments of an embedded story, a huge set of hidden clues to be deciphered, encouraging viewers to make their own connections and invent their own narrative in order to solve the charade with its many solutions, staged by the artist.[10] This approach is exemplified in his major commission with Artangel titled Locked Room Scenario (2011), in which the visitor enters a totally designed office space in a former trading depot where they are invited to solve the mystery of a group show of fictionalised artists, including their work, to which they are denied access.[11]

No style style

Gander's work is not invested in any medium or style as such. Suspicious of the positive link between artistic style, medium and work, Gander has cultivated a ‘non-style’ that enables him to pursue ideas across many traditionally understood artistic media. ‘Brilliant practitioners,’ Gander believes:

are those who know how to move around language. If you move around language you have to move around devices and materials... When I’m making work one of the choices I make during a million other choices is what is it going to be? Why would a 'really good practitioner' use the same material for everything they do even though things are meant to mean different things?[12]

However, across this work there are preoccupations that Gander returns to: legacies of modernist design, aesthetic value, creativity and education, para-possible and fictional (utopian and dystopian) worlds, and the relationship between art and design.

The work It Came out of Nowhere, he said staring at an empty space (2012) is a Comme des Garçons document wallet made collaboratively with the artist Jonathan Monk. His series of works titled Device #5 (2005) might be functional devices but actually are not. His installation at dOCUMENTA (13) titled I need some meaning I can memorise (The Invisible Pull) (2012) presented an empty room with a light breeze circulating. In 2015, Gander erected The artist’s second phone, a giant billboard installed outside Lisson Gallery, London, which borrows the aesthetic of vacant Mexican billboards to announce his phone number to all passing. The series of works 'A lamp made by the artist for his wife' (2013) are ad hoc combinations of products available from most hardware stores to produce a functioning item of furniture. Recently, Gander has increasingly used vending machines to distribute works. At frieze art fair 2019 Time Well Spent (2019) dispensed pebbles for £500 a piece.[13]

Collision and association

Gander's fascination with techniques of creative and associative collisions is evident in his earliest ‘Loose Association’ public lecturers, begun in 2002, and published together in 2007 as the book Loose Associations and Other Lectures. These lectures range across material, from meditations on the film Back to the Future to the writing of Italo Calvino, modernism to children's books. Motifs of association and collision are evident across his works and he has explored techniques of association used by earlier modernist artists and architects, notably Luis Barragán and Ernö Goldfinger. With the sculptural series The Way Things Collide (2012 - ongoing) Gander collides two elements that are hardest to be associated logically with the human mind. Each is a game, a challenge, with narrative consequences. A knotted condom is left on a USM cabinet; a skate wing rests on a suitcase; a macaroon balances on a stool. These are experiments in minimum constituents of narrative.

Creativity

Gander believes that everyone makes creative decisions in their daily life and can be a creative artist.[14] These everyday acts of creativity, he argues, are often more exciting than the creative artworks of celebrated contemporary artists, whose repetition of a successful formula is contrary to creativity. Art for Gander is about ‘trying to make some original contribution to human history and knowledge, like an explorer’.[15]

To avoid habitualised ways of working, Gander has looked to children's creativity, frequently collaborating with his daughters to realise artworks. Likewise, since the early 2000s he has used an array of pseudonyms to produce work outside of his typical concerns. These fictional characters spread across an increasingly growing web of citation and cross-reference, self-corroborating and self-sustaining fictional and possible historical events. In 2014, Gander told an interviewer that: ‘I hope my work is […] expansive or “multiplicit” (that is not a word but it should be). An objective is that the work has more end points than starting points – like a 1970s children's ‘Choose your own adventure story’’.[16] An influential book Gander has referred to in several interviews is Edward Packer’s ‘Choose Your Own Adventure’ books, first published in 1976, and marketed to 10 to 14 year olds. In these books the reader begins at page one, follows instructions at the foot of the page to turn to page two, from where instructions at the foot of that page motivates a decision that splits the narrative.[17]

Ryan Gander is a wheelchair user. Despite various interviews and works made in which Gander explicitly states he does not understand himself to be disabled or differently abled to anyone else, his work is interpreted, often by able-bodied commentators, as that of a disabled artist. The curator Matthew Higgs, for example, has argued that his disability contributes to his unique way of seeing: ‘The first thing I ever noticed about Ryan was that he uses a wheelchair. I mention this not in passing, nor as a gratuitous aside. Whilst I accept that some people might argue that this information is irrelevant, I would like to think that the fact that Ryan uses a wheelchair does – at least – have some bearing on my subsequent understanding of his work.’[18]

Previously, Gander has not addressed the appearance of his wheelchair in works, however in recent years he has felt compelled to in order to correct other people's perception of his exceptionalism as a wheelchair user. In the BBC television programme 'Me, My Selfie and I with Ryan Gander', broadcast in 2019, Gander meets a transhumanist with a chip imbedded in his palm to open doors who tells him he might be ‘improved’ too with bionic limbs modelled on cheetah legs to replace his. Bemused, Gander replies: ‘Being in a wheelchair doesn’t affect my view on the world. In an age where everyone identifies with being different, I am someone who actually can’t walk and don’t associate with being disabled. I don’t tick the Arts Council funding box that says “disabled” because I don't identify.’ He continues, ‘I don’t want cheetah legs. I don’t know any cheetahs.’[19]

In his recent work The End (2020) an animatronic mouse poking its head through a gallery wall it's burrowed through elaborates further on the capturing of difference, voicing the opinion of the artist:

Difference has become a currency of sorts. I happen to have been born with a great difference to most, and one that is visually recognisable at that. A curse to some, but a blessing to others. To me, it is neither. I am not sure how or when, but at some point, I just chose not identify with my difference. I chose to ignore it, not in the hope that it would go away, but in the hope that being different would not consume my time and energy that could be better spent doing all the good stuff in the world.[20]

Public sculpture

Ryan Gander has been commissioned to produce public art works for a range of sites, including Central Park, USA, Karlsaue Park, Kassel, Germany, Mexico City Zoo, The Metropolitan Cathedral of Christ the King, Liverpool, and Cambridge Biomedical Campus.

In 2010, Gander's sculpture The Happy Prince was commissioned by the Public Art Fund for Central Park, New York City. This concrete resin sculpture presented the ruin of the fictional statue from the final chapter in Oscar Wilde’s children’s book The Happy Prince (1888). The first of an ongoing number of public sculptures, Gander noted in an interview with The White Review magazine that he’d become disillusioned with contemporary art’s institutions and felt public art was a new challenge:

I am embarking on a series of challenges I have set for myself and public art was the first. It had to do with producing a public artwork about the nature of public art, which would discuss the value of art in public spaces and to a given public… [I]t was nice to be in a situation where I wasn’t sure if it would be successful or without knowing what a certain public response would be.[21]

Two years later, in 2012, Gander was commissioned to produce Escape hatch to Culturefield, situated within a wooded area of the Karlslaue Park, Kassel, DE, as part of dOCUMENTA 13. Off the park’s designated paths, a trapdoor fabricated from iron and concrete appeared to lead to an underground series of tunnels of some kind. The hatch, visibly partially open so that the spectator might partially peer inside, showed ladder rungs leading down. The same year, Gander’s work It’s got such good heart in it was commissioned by Mexico City Zoo and located in the ‘activity centre’ for lions. Based on Sol LeWitt's open cube structure – and the story that LeWitt allowed his cats to use his redundant sculpture – upscaled and added to, it was offered as a climbing frame and scratching post for lions.

In 2018, Gander produced two public artworks, the first sited outside BALTIC gallery, Newcastle and the second outside The Metropolitan Cathedral of Christ the King, Liverpool as part of the Liverpool Biennial. In the former, titled To Give Light (Northern Aspirational Charms), ten minimal, simplified forms based on ten objects originally designed to emit or shine light were cast in black concrete and arranged chronologically in a circular configuration. Each element featured three links of mooring chain attached, implying a nautical functionality as well as alluding to trinkets on an oversized charm bracelet. The latter, titled From five minds of great vision (The Metropolitan Cathedral of Christ the King disassembled and reassembled to conjure resting places in the public realm), consisted of five public artworks, functional as benches, placed in a circle in the public square outside the cathedral. Each artwork was enlarged and reproduced from a maquette made by a child from Knotty Ash Primary using building blocks that, when rearranged, made a model of the cathedral.

In 2019, Gander was commissioned to produce a public sculpture by Cambridge Biomedical Campus. Titled The Green & The Gardens, Gander led a concept that transformed the space into a green heart of the campus, a shared place for everyone. In collaboration with Gillespies, landscape architects, they developed the design, selected the planting, furniture and lighting. Gander integrated sculptural elements: coloured tents that glow at night, an open gateway, a stile, and a community noticeboard.

Other public artworks include: The day to day accumulation of hope, failure and ecstasy - The zenith of your career (The Last Degas) (2017), exhibited in the gardens of The Contemporary Austin Commission (USA), in late Autumn, 2018; Because editorial is costly (2016), a giant, swollen, mirror-finish stainless steel version of 'Rapport de volumes' (1919) by Georges Vantongerloo in a crater as if crash landed exhibited during the Okayama Art Summit (JP); Dad’s Halo Effect (2014), three polished stainless steel sculptures initially conceived by the artist's father when he worked at General Motors in the 1980s, and based on parts of the steering mechanism of a commercial Bedford truck, re-imagined by the artist from his father's verbal description; No political motivation (2012), a faithful reproduction of the revolving New Scotland Yard sign constructed to display the words ‘THE WORLD S FAIR’, incorrectly typeset with a half space between the characters ‘D’ and ’S’ – meaning the sign could be interpreted in one of two differing ways, as an advertisement for an event or as a political slogan. Based at Museo Tamayo, Mexico City, MX.

Curatorial

Gander has curated, by himself and in collaboration, numerous exhibitions, including, notably, ’The way in which it landed’ at Tate Britain, London, UK in 2008, featuring Lucy Clout, Nathaniel Mellors, Aurelien Froment, David Renggli, and Carol Bove; ‘Young British Art’ at Limoncello, London, UK in 2011 featuring 70 emerging artist; ‘Night in the Museum’ to celebrate the 70th anniversary of the Arts Council collection, which toured to The Attenborough Centre, Leicester, UK, Longside Gallery, Yorkshire Sculpture Park, Yorkshire, UK, and Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery, Birmingham, UK; ‘The Greatest Story Ever Told’, The National Museum of Art Osaka, Osaka, JP in 2017; ‘Knock Knock’ at South London Gallery, London, UK, 2018. ‘The Annotated Reader’, a publication and exhibition, curated with art critic Jonathan P. Watts, is touring the world. In 2016, Gander also collaborated with Watts on ‘general studies’ at OUTPOST, Norwich, a ‘service’ that offered artist-designed airbnb rooms available to rent cheaply during the British Art Show.

Television

Gander first made an appearance on BBC Two in 2012 on an episode of 'The Culture Show'. The following year, in 2015, 'The Art of Everything', presented by Miranda Sawyer, explored ‘the extraordinary diversity of Gander's art, spanning sculptures that tinker with art history, chess sets made from car parts, fantastical cocktails and even designer trainers’.[22] In 2016, BBC Two broadcast Ryan Gander: Living is a Creative Act. In 2017, Gander appeared on Sky Arts’ The Art Show. That same year BBC Four presented Ryan Gander: The Idea of Japan, which took him ‘six thousand miles east of his Suffolk studio, to investigate how Japanese visual culture is closely linked to a special relationship with time, as the country’s past and future inform its present tense’.[23] This was followed in 2019 by 'Me, My Selfie and I with Ryan Gander', which ‘investigates the selfie – the icon of a new kind of self-regard that hardly existed just ten years ago’.[24] The programme was critically acclaimed with The Guardian newspaper's Eleanor Morgan noting that ‘Gander’s lines of questioning make for compelling viewing.’[25]

Teaching

Between 2003 and 2004, Gander taught Fine Art part-time at Sheffield Institute of Arts, Leeds College of Art and Manchester Metropolitan University. Gander was Professor of Visual Art at the University of Huddersfield. In 2004, he was awarded the Cocheme Fellowship at Byam Shaw School of Art, London.

Subsequently, alongside his artistic practice, Gander has continued to be a visiting lecturer in a range of leading international institutions, including the AA School of Architecture, London, UK; the Royal College of Art, London, UK; École nationale des beaux-arts, Lyon, FR; The New School, New York, US; University of Southern California, US; Fudan University, Shanghai, CN; and The Royal Danish Academy of Art, School of Architecture, Copenhagen, DK. In 2019, he began a Hodder Fellowship at the Lewis Center for the Arts at Princeton University, an award given to artists and writers of exceptional promise to pursue independent projects at Princeton University during the academic year.

Gander has previously served as a trustee of South London Gallery, London, Grizdale Arts, Liverpool Biennial, Open School East, as well as sitting on Tate Modern Council and Tate Members Council. Gander is currently a patron of Castlefield Gallery, Manchester and part of the Arts Council England Collection Acquisition Committee.

Fairfield International and residency programme

In 2013, Gander and creative consultant Simon Turnbull proposed plans to open Fairfield International, a residential art school in a former primary school in Saxmundham, Suffolk. Modelled on a hybrid of the Dutch academy and artist residency, Fairfield International would provide six residencies a year to hard-up artists in need of a retreat.

With no fees, students would receive a living stipend to participate in a non-instrumentalised, non-qualification approach to art education, foregrounding the work itself, minimising competitiveness of the British, particularly London-based, art school system. ‘I think there are artists who come from situations that hold no other prerogative than to practice art. That sort of freedom is rare,’ Gander told Artforum in 2013. Continuing, he said: ‘I think that when one is in a situation in which they don’t have to worry about time and space – two of the greatest denominators in an artist’s ability to practice – that’s when someone starts acting like a real artist. When you give young brilliant artists some time and space, everything else becomes contributing factors to their work.’[26]

Despite raising funds for Fairfield International, the project was cancelled in 2015 due to a combination of factors, which Gander has written about in his book Fieldwork: ‘the bureaucracy of dealing with the county council over the purchase of the building’ and ‘the presence of something called “knotweed” on the site’.[27] At the time insurers would not offer indemnity against sites with knotweed.

Recently, in 2020, Gander has begun publicly discussing his desire to open a residency programme in a village in Suffolk where his studio complex is situated. In a feature for the Suffolk Magazine he explained that he would make accommodation and studio space available for three artists for three months at a time. ‘There are so many artists,’ he told the magazine, ‘with incredible potential but very limited means, so I would invite them to live and work here for free.’[28]

Prizes and honours

Since 2001, Gander has been the recipient of numerous prestigious prizes and honours for contemporary art, notably: Arts Council of England International Fellowship, UK (2001–03); Prix De Rome for Sculpture, NL (2003); Beck's Futures Shortlist, ICA, London, UK (2005); BN AMRO Prize, NL; Baloise Art Statements Prize, Basel Art Fair, CH (both 2006); DENA Foundation Art Award, FR (2007); Paul Hamlyn Award, UK (2008); Nominee for The Times / South Bank Show Breakthrough Award, UK; Winner of the Zurich Art Prize, Haus Konstruktiv, CH (both 2009); and Pommery Prize Winner (2019).

In 2017, Gander was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the New Year Honours for services to contemporary art.

Exhibitions

Ryan Gander is represented by Lisson gallery, London, in the UK, gb agency, Paris, and Esther Schipper gallery, Berlin, on the continent, and TARO NASU, Tokyo, in Asia. Gander's recent major projects include Intervals at Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, NYC, US; dOCUMENTA (13), Kassel, G; ILLUMInations at the 54th International Art Exhibition of the Venice Biennale; Cambridge Biomedical Campus, 2019; Liverpool Biennial of Contemporary Art 2018, Liverpool, UK; Great Exhibition of the North, BALTIC, 2018; Sydney Biennale 2018, Sydney, AU; Performa 15, New York, US; British Art Show 8, Leeds, UK; Panorama, High Line, New York, US; Imagineering, Okayama Castle, Okayama, JP; The artists have the keys, 2 Willow Road, London, UK; Unlimited, Art Basel, Basel, CH; Parcours, Art Basel, Basel, CH; Esperluette, Palais de Tokyo, Paris, FR; Locked Room Scenario, commissioned by Artangel, London, UK; and The Happy Prince, Public Art Fund, Doris C. Freedman Plaza, Central Park, NYC, US.

Collections

Gander's works feature in both international public and private collections, including: Arts Council Collection, London, UK; The Boijmans van Beuningen Museum, Rotterdam NL; British Council, London, UK; Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, US; Carré d’art, Musée d’Art Contemporain, Nîmes; Dazaifu Tenmangu Shrine, Fukuoka, JP; Fnac, Paris, FR; Fundación Jumex Arte Contemporáneo, Mexico City, MX; FRAC du Nord Pas-de-Calais, Calais, FR; Frac Haute Normandie, Rouen, FR; Frac Ile de France, Paris, FR; Government Art Collection, London, UK; Hamburger Bahnhof, Museum für Gegenwart, DE; Kulturbesitz, DE; Haus Konstruktiv, Zurich, CH; Kadist Art Foundation, Paris, FR; MacBA, Barcelona; MaMBO, Bologna IT; MCA Chicago, US; MUMOK, Wien, AT; Museo Tamayo Arte Contemporáneo, Mexico City, MX; Museum of Modern Art, New York, US; Musée D'Art Contemporain De Montréal, Montréal, CA; Muzeum Sztuki Nowoczesnej w Warszawie; The National Museum of Art, Osaka, JP; Tate Collection, London, UK; Welsh Museum, Cardiff, UK.

Publications

Personal life

Gander is married to the former director of the Limoncello gallery, Rebecca May Marston, with whom he has two daughters and one son.[29]

References

  1. Ryan Gander interviewed by Simon Turnbull, L&N Magazine, 'Community Issue', Issue 04: https://www.dropbox.com/s/t7uyu8xryggh8u5/L%26N_TabloidLN04_AW_11.pdf?dl=0
  2. Ryan Gander, 2019-20 Hodder Fellow, Lewis Center, Princeton University, https://arts.princeton.edu/people/profiles/rgander/. Retrieved 25 February 2020.
  3. 'Dad's Halow Effect: "Globally admired" Ryan Gander work revealed', BBC News, 26 Nov 2014: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-manchester-30209457. Accessed 25 Feb 2020.
  4. 'Ryan Gander and Tony Chambers: How we redesigned the Kitchen Sink', Richard Benson, The Guardian, 29 Sept 2019: https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2019/sep/29/otomoto-collaboration-to-make-ordinary-things-pleasurable. Retrieved 25 Feb 2020
  5. Art of Conversation, 'Ryan Gander & Cory Arcangel Discuss Context and Intention at Lisson Gallery', 14 October 2018: http://aofc.co
  6. Art of Conversation, 'Ryan Gander & Cory Arcangel Discuss Context and Intention at Lisson Gallery', 14 October 2018: http://aofc.co
  7. 'Ryan Gander – Winner of 2005': https://artprize.baloise.com/en/home/awarded-artists/Ryan-Gander.html. Retrieved 25 Feb 2020.
  8. Ryan Gander, 2019-20 Hodder Fellow, Lewis Center, Princeton University, https://arts.princeton.edu/people/profiles/rgander/. Retrieved 25 February 2020.
  9. Philipp Hindahl, 'Of Mice and Mortality: Ryan Gander', Mousse Magazine, June 2019: http://moussemagazine.it/mice-mortality-ryan-gander. Retrieved 25/02/20.
  10. 'Film Screening: Me, My Selfie and I', 6 Dec 2019: https://humanities.princeton.edu/event/screening-me-my-selfie-and-i/
  11. 'Ryan Gander: Locked Room Scenario', Artangel: https://www.artangel.org.uk/project/locked-room-scenario. Retrieved 25 Feb 2020.
  12. Ryan Gander, Culturefield, Koenig Books, 2014.
  13. 'British artist Ryan Gander's vending machine sells art for $600 a pop', CNN Online, 4 Oct 2019: https://edition.cnn.com/style/article/ryan-gander-art-vending-machine/index.html. Retrieved 25 Feb 2020.
  14. 'Ryan Gander: How To Live The Creative Life', BBC, last broadcast on BBC World News, 29 Dec 2016: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/n3ct1929.
  15. Ryan Gander and Tony Chambers: How we redesigned the Kitchen Sink', Richard Benson, The Guardian, 29 Sept 2019: https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2019/sep/29/otomoto-collaboration-to-make-ordinary-things-pleasurable. Retrieved 25 Feb 2020.
  16. 'Interview with Ryan Gander', Timothée Chaillou, The White Review, Jan 2012: http://www.thewhitereview.org/feature/interview-with-ryan-gander. Retrieved 25 Feb 2020.
  17. Ryan Gander ‘Curating the Library’ in Loose Associations and Other Lectures, Onestar Press, 2007, p.104.
  18. 'Stedelijk Museum Bureau Amsterdam - The Death of Abbe Farria - Ryan Gander'. www.smba.nl. Retrieved 21 Nov 2018.
  19. 'Me, My Selfie, and I', Last broadcast BBC4 19 Feb 2020: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m0003g0r
  20. SOLID HOUSE Press release, Transcript: THE END, 2020
  21. 'Interview with Ryan Gander', Timothée Chaillou, The White Review, Jan 2012: http://www.thewhitereview.org/feature/interview-with-ryan-gander. Retrieved 25 Feb 2020.
  22. 'Ryan Gander - The Art of Everything', BBC: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/n3csw9s7.
  23. 'Ryan Gander: The Idea of Japan', BBC: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b08v8jd1.
  24. 'Me, My Selfie and I with Ryan Gander', BBC: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m0003g0r.
  25. Eleanor Morgan, 'Ryan Gander on the hell of selfies: "The World has gone mad:, The Guardian, 18 Mar 2019: https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2019/mar/18/ryan-gander-on-the-hell-of-selfies-the-world-has-gone-mad-me-my-selfie-and-i-bbc. Retrieved. 25 Feb 2020.
  26. Ryan Gander, ‘500 Words’, As told to Huib Haye van der Werf, Artforum, 7 Feb 2013: http://artforum.com/words/id=41715. Retrieved 25 Feb 2020.
  27. Ryan Gander, ‘Knotweed’, Fieldwork, An incomplete reader, Plazzy Banter, 2015
  28. Catherine Larner, 'Expect the unexpected', East Anglian Daily Times, Jan 2020.
  29. 'Ben Cobb, Limencello Gallery, Interview Magazine, 18 Nov 2010: https://www.interviewmagazine.com/art/limoncello-gallery. Retrieved 25 Feb 2020.'
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