Ceal Floyer—conceptual artist known for her minimalist, playful works—has died, aged 57 – The Art Newspaper

Ceal Floyer—an artist known for her subtly humorous, conceptual films and installations that utilised everyday objects—died yesterday (11 December) “after a long battle with illness”, according to a statement from her galleries, Lisson and Esther Schipper.
Floyer became well known in the 1990s for her minimalist aesthetic that often played with scale, language and meaning. Examples include her early work Light Switch (1992–99), part of the Tate collection, made up of a projector beaming the image of a light switch onto the wall, and her Nail Biting Performance (2001), in which she bit her nails into a microphone.
Ceal Floyer’s Light Switch (U.S.) #2 (2017) Photo: © MSU © The artist / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2025
“Floyer was one of the most radically conceptual artists of her generation, renowned for her concise humour and profoundly understated visual language,” write her galleries in a statement. “Her works are brilliantly inventive and, just like her, full of razor-sharp intelligence, dry wit, and visual acuity […]
“She achieved, in her practice, a paradoxical condition of feather-light gravitas. Exuding a quiet but forceful presence, her distinct artistic voice was both playful and profound.”
Floyer was born in Pakistan in 1968 and grew up in England before settling in Berlin in the late 1990s. She studied at Goldsmiths College, London, and went on to teach herself as a visiting professor in the sculpture department at the HFBK University of Fine Arts Hamburg between 2014 and 2017.
“Throughout her various teaching roles, she was an important source of inspiration for the university and its students,” says a statement from HFBK Hamburg. “We will miss her greatly as an artist and teacher.”
Floyer received several prizes during her career, including the Preis der Nationalgalerie für junge Kunst in 2007 and the Nam June Paik Art Center Prize in 2009. She exhibited at major international biennials and exhibitions including Manifesta 11 in Zurich (2016), Documenta 13 in Kassel (2012), and the 53rd Venice Biennale (2009). Her major solo shows include those held at Aspen Art Museum (2016), Kunstmuseum Bonn (2015); Museum of Modern Art in North Miami (2010), and Palais de Tokyo in Paris (2009).
As well as the Tate, her work can be found in museum collections including the Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Neue Nationalgalerie, Berlin; the Kunstmuseum Basel; the Musée d’Art Moderne de Paris; Museo Jumex, Mexico; the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne; and the Toyota Municipal Museum of Art, Tokyo.




