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Luke Caulfield
Luke Caulfield (born London 1969) is a British artist known for painting, projection mapping and 3-D work pertaining to the perception of time.

Life
Caulfield is the son of Patrick Caulfield CBE, the artist and Pauline Caulfield, the textile designer. He studied Drama and Classics at the University of London for three years and Fine Arts at UCL's Slade School of Fine Art for four years, after a year studying a Pre-Degree Fine Art course in Chelsea.

Work
Caulfield's pracitce combines painting, projection paintings, guerilla projections and 3-D prints. The work delves into history to question authorship and temporal responses to objecthood.

Whilst still at art school in 1998, Caulfield, won a prize in the well publicised NatWest Art Prize with Tacita Dean. From there he was widely collected by Anita Zabludowicz, Paul Smith, Alan Cristea, Vanessa Branson, Nelson Woo, Prue O'Day, Christian Shin, Carolina Botin, Glazo Smith Kline and others. Internationally exhibiting in France, USA, Japan, Italy, Morocco, Switerland, South Korea and Norway. Publications include Breaking Down the Barriers (Richard Cork), New Gothic Art (Francesca Gavin), The Times, The Telegraph, The Independent, The Guardian, Sunday Times, Sunday Telegraph, Independent on Sunday, Financial Times, Vogue, Art Review, The Art Newspaper, Dazed and Confused, Tatler, Pop magazine, Contemporary magazine, El Mundo and Le Journal des Artes. Caulfield has also written for the Musee Picasso Paris on Guernica and been quoted in Guernica: An Icon by Gijs van Hensbergen. Prizes include the Abbey Fellowship Rome (British School at Rome), Cocheme Fellowship, AIR residency, Arts Foundation Fellowship shortlist, Natwest Art Prize, Mostyn Open and the John Moores.