Eton Mess - Justin Piccirilli In addition to the physical banners around the UK, each of the four new works commissioned for The Many Costs of Living is available online as an animated campaign banner and in an audio described animation of all four works. You can find out more about the artwork below or by reading our exhibition catalogue. Explore the rest of the show Find out more about the artist 📢 Listen to a description of this animation: Your browser does not support the audio element. Please click here to download the file About Eton Mess Ingredients: Living Standards Inequality Education Learning Conditions School meals Inflation Pay Working hours Services Rent Food Energy costs Social and medical care Transport Method: Begin by reducing living standards, except for the wealthiest, to increase inequality. Reduce funding in education to decrease the standard of learning conditions. Drop school meals and trim childcare. Slowly depreciate pay while extending working hours. Diminish services while increasing rent, food, and energy costs. Mix together tensions within the public transportation system. Season with crushed social and medical care. Make sure the dish is oven ready, avoid microwaving. Serve cold and let the markets decide the outcome. 📢 Listen to a description of the artwork: Your browser does not support the audio element. Please click here to download the file Banner image description: Digitally-rendered still capturing a virtual gallery-like environment, in which an artwork appears to be hanging from a white wall. The work is a digital print reimagining a supermarket label used for food packaging at its end of sell-by date. It is dominated by thick upper and lower borders in industrial yellow, which sandwich a block of white space across which runs a long barcode. Along the upper border, the word REDUCED shows in large capitals, and below it, under the barcode and in the lower border, set out like a promotional discount, we read: was HUNGRY, NOW FREEZING, with the word HUNGRY crossed through with a single black line. There is a shadow on the wall behind the artwork, creating a three dimensional effect in the still. Manage Cookie Preferences