1319 items, 68ms

» Refine your search

"London "

Related Searches:




Nationality

Region

Object Type

Object Sub Type

Classification

Genres

Collections

Artist Traits

Artist Name

Decade Work Created

Mentions Per Year

Organization

The Fifth Quarter
© » KADIST

Toby Ziegler

Painting (Painting)

The Fifth Quarter might have taken its mysterious inspiration from the eponymous Stephen King story collated into the Nightmares & Dreamscapes collection. Various vanishing points and interior perspectives, like in another painting dated the same year called Continental Breakfast , create a complex matrix in which motifs, shadowy or geometric forms coexist to further confuse the map of this space. A disturbing yet alluring virtual reality composed of a medley of seemingly abstract designs is depicted through digital and painterly means.

Hako
© » KADIST

Hiraki Sawa

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Hako (2006) depicts a mysterious and dystopic landscape where the world becomes flat: distance between different spaces, depth of field and three-dimensional perceptions are canceled. Interiors of a Victorian doll’s house, a rippled seascape, a palm tree forest, and a gravel seashore are superimposed, morphing into each other. The hermetic narrative is charged with psychological and mythological aspects.

Fire Cycles III (Subcycle 10)
© » KADIST

Anthony McCall

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

This score is a graphic record of the detailed choreography of one of Anthony McCall’s Landscape for Fire performances. These took place between 1972-74 in the UK at the Museum of Modern Art in Oxford, Colchester School of Art, in Reading and in North Weald as well as in Sweden at Fylkingen Society of Contemporary Music and Arts, Stockholm, and in the USA at the William Patterson University, Wayne, New Jersey. Many of these events were photographed by David Kilburn and Carolee Schneemann, only one in 1972 was filmed.

Wagon Wheel
© » KADIST

Toby Ziegler

Sculpture (Sculpture)

Wagon Wheel is a work with a fundamental dynamism that derives both from the rotating movement of the elements suspended on poles and the kicking of the legs of the figure. It is based on a pornographic image by Giulio Romano (ca.1499-1546). Romano had completed Raphael’s frescos in the Vatican after the latter’s death but was not paid for the work.

H.2.N.Y Skeleton of the Dump
© » KADIST

Michael Landy

H.2. N. Y Skeleton of the Dump revolves entirely around the performance “Homage to New York” (1960), of the Swiss artist Jean Tinguely (1925-1991), during which the machine built by the artist in the gardens of the Museum of Modern Art (MOMA) had to self-destruct itself in 27 minutes, but, in the end, it had to be finished off by firemenbeing called in after it erupted in flames. Since the discovery of Jean tinguely’s retrospective at the Tate Gallery in London, in 1982, Michael Landy spent two years researching and sketching (charcoal, oil, glue, ink) from his previous research carried out at Museum Tinguely in Basel, and at the MOMA in New York.

Japanese House Series
© » KADIST

Tomoko Yoneda

Photography (Photography)

Yoneda’s Japanese House (2010) series of photographs depicts buildings constructed in Taiwan during the period of Japanese occupation, between 1895 and 1945. Yoneda focuses both on the original Japanese features of the houses and on details that have been altered since the end of the occupation. The yet-to-be acknowledged history of the occupation of Taiwan and other East Asian countries by Japan during World War II is subtly disclosed in these pictures.

Faltenwurf (Stairwell)
© » KADIST

Wolfgang Tillmans

Photography (Photography)

Wolfgang Tillmans initiated the ongoing series Faltenwurf in 1989, representing compositions of unused clothing, with special attention paid to the ways in which they drape and fold. The title is taken from a Germanic term used in the context of art history, designating classical drapery. In this particular photograph, Faltenwurf (Stairwell) , an assortment of various colored clothes lay tangled on a set of stairs, as a sculpture of abstract forms.

Destilaciones
© » KADIST

Ximena Garrido Lecca

Sculpture (Sculpture)

Destilaciones ( Distillations , 2014) is an installation composed of a group of ceramic pots, presented on the floor and within a steel structure. Copper pipes run through the perforated ceramics, evoking the design of an oil purifier. The work is a direct reference to the history of the Peruvian coastal town of Lobitos.

Memorial for intersection #2
© » KADIST

Amalia Pica

Sculpture (Sculpture)

Memorial for intersections #2 (2013) is a minimalist, black metallic structure that contains the brightly colored translucent circles, triangles, rectangles, and squares that originally were presented in Pica’s performance work A ? B ? C (2013).

Beyond the White Walls
© » KADIST

Jeremy Deller

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Beyond the White Walls , with a commentary written and spoken by Jeremy Deller, is often wryly amusing. The artist narrates the many projects he has completed or which are in progress beyond the gallery walls. It is beyond the gallery where Deller is at his most effective and where his art reaches out to and into people’s lives.

Deck Painting I
© » KADIST

Alexandre da Cunha

Painting (Painting)

His Deck Painting I recalls the simplistic stripes of conceptual artist Daniel Buren, or the minimal lines of twentieth century abstract painting, but is in reality a readymade, fashioned from repurposed fabric of deck chairs. Alexandre da Cunha reinvents found objects in surprising ways that combine the material characteristics of Arte Povera with the concerns and techniques of painting. Da Cunha’s work often features flags—either as a found material per se or as a constructed form—that reflect the artist’s interest in issues of nationality, governmental politics, allegiance, and culture.

Line describing a cone
© » KADIST

Anthony McCall

Film & Video (Film & Video)

The film Line Describing a Cone was made in 1973 and it was projected for the first time at Fylkingen (Stockholm) on 30 August of the same year. This piece, which was initially screened in independent film contexts, it soon began to be shown at art museums and ended up becoming one of the key works of the artistic movement that opened up the visual arts towards cinema. With a duration of 30 minutes, the film shows the creation of a white curve being projected onto an empty space.

Glaze (Savana)
© » KADIST

Alexandre da Cunha

Glaze (Savana) (2005) is an assemblage of found materials: a car wheel, a tire, and a wooden plinth of the type traditionally used to display sculpture. It directly engages with the readymade, a subject that Alexandre de Cunha takes up throughout his practice, often inflecting it with a tropical, and South American–inspired materiality and painterly style that could potentially come across as a stereotype. Here, da Cunha transforms the component parts into a composition that highlights often-overlooked materials of artistic production and cultural mass-production.

Laissez-Faire (Rainbow Flag)
© » KADIST

Alexandre da Cunha

Painting (Painting)

In Laissez-Faire (Rainbow Flag) da Cunha has turned a beach towel into both a painting and a flag. Where the printed surface of the towel originally served to enliven this commodity, here the pattern—now stretched and re-presented—suddenly refers to abstract painting’s promises of transcendence. And its crisply painted shape pulls the printed colors into the rectangularity of the canvas and, as da Cunha notes, the graphic iconicity of flags.

Landscape for Fire
© » KADIST

Anthony McCall

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Landscape for fire is a major work by Anthony McCall. The film recounts a performance where characters in white, light up fires in a very orchestrated choreography of lights in a vast flat landscape. The performance is carefully planned – the fires are lit and geometrically aligned in a precise temporal progression.

Untitled (Perfect Lovers + 1)
© » KADIST

Cerith Wyn Evans

Sculpture (Sculpture)

Untitled (Perfect Lovers + 1) by Cerith Wyn Evans takes as its starting point Felix Gonzales-Torres’s seminal work Untitled (Perfect Lovers) , in which two clocks were synchronized and left to run without interference, the implication being that one would stop before the other. Gonzales-Torres’ original work was a personal allusion to his own partner’s increasingly debilitating HIV-related illness, which grapples with the existential tension of coexistence in the face of death. Cerith Wyn Evans’s piece takes the same concept, and adds a third clock, moving from the intimacy of a monogamous relationship to suggest a more expansive, or possibly polyamorous alternative.

West (Flag 1) (Flag 3) (Flag 6)
© » KADIST

Alexandre da Cunha

Photography (Photography)

The series West (Flag 1), West (Flag 3), and West (Flag 6) continues da Cunha’s ongoing exploration of the form’s various vertical, horizontal, and diagonal stripes. Here, da Cunha overlays thick bars of color (blue, green, and red) on photographs of the ocean at sunset with surfers in floating on the horizon. The solid colors contrast with the fading colors reflected in the sunset, and the tilted orientation suggests a familiar California beach scene.

Fedex® Large Kraft Box 2004 FEDEX 155143 REV 10/04 SSCC, International Priority, Los Angeles-Beijing trk#875468976062, September 9-14, 2011, International Priority, Bejing-London trk#874594463978, March 13-15, 2012, International Priority, London-San Francisco, trk#777001529227, August 16-18, 2016, International Priority, San Francisco-Beijing, trk# 775046700145, October 27-November 5, 2021
© » KADIST

Walead Beshty

Sculpture (Sculpture)

Constructed out of metal or glass to mirror the size of FedEx shipping boxes, and to fit securely inside, Walead Beshty’s FedEx works are then shipped, accruing cracks, chips, scrapes, and bruises along the way to their destination. Displayed with the cardboard boxes (and their shipping labels, which chart the journey in a different way) that contain them during the journey, these damaged forms draw from minimalist sculpture, and conceptual artworks that focused on distance, travel, and virtual connections.

Warder
© » KADIST

Lydia Gifford

Installation (Installation)

Lydia Gifford composes her work between pictorial expression and its inscription within an exhibition space. This particular approach implies the performative aspect of her in situ painting. The artist takes the entire environment into consideration from the canvas to the exhibition walls.

Untitled (Waiters dancing with Itinerants, Onomatopoeia)
© » KADIST

Charles Avery

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

Since 2005, Charles Avery has devoted his practice to the perpetual description of a fictional island. Replete with its own population and constantly shifting topography, Avery’s intricately conceived project amounts to an ever-expanding body of drawings, sculptures, installations and texts which evince the island. Exhibited incrementally these heterogeneous elements serve as terms within the unifying structure of the island – as multiple emissions of an imaginary state, and as a meditation on the central themes of philosophy and the problems of art-making.

Untitled (Map)
© » KADIST

Charles Avery

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

Charles Avery has been constructing a narrative in his work since 2004. Between fantasy and reality, The Islanders is a very particular universe he has created in which to gather his disparate ideas. His practice primarily involves drawing, sculptures, texts and installations which participate in the epic and dreamlike narrative whole in the course of making.

Forensic Poster
© » KADIST

Mike Cooter

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

Forensic Poster was first realized in 2006 and reactivated in 2011; its making consisted of the artist visiting the London School of Criminology and corresponding with the interim director there in order to reproduce a poster by memory. This piece of work is symptomatic of Cooter’s projects which are often arduous enterprises littered with pitfalls, since they imply prospecting and collaborating with third parties whose will determine the success of the project. Forensic Poster consists of a letter, emails and a gouache which translates the artist’s attempt to recreate a poster glimpsed at in one of the study halls of the London Police Department of Forensic Medicine.

Creole Portraits III
© » KADIST

Joscelyn Gardner

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

Creole Portraits III alludes to the 18th century practice by slave women on Caribbean plantations of using tropical plants as natural abortifacients. As an act of political resistance against their exploitation as “breeders” of new slaves and to protest the inhumanity of slavery, some slave women chose to either abort or kill their offspring. Armed with practical knowledge passed on orally from their African ancestors and/or Amerindian counterparts, enslaved Creole women collected the seeds, bark, flowers, sap, and roots from various plants which allowed them to secretly put an end to their pregnancies.

HFT The Gardener
© » KADIST

Suzanne Treister

Film & Video (Film & Video)

HFT The Gardner by Suzanne Treister is a large-scale project that comprises drawings and computer works by fictional character Hillel Fischer Traumberg. HFT is an algorithmic High-Frequency Trader based in London, who experiences a hallucinogenic episode that triggers a journey into the exploration of psychoactive plants. In a nerd-like discovery of Discovering Hebrew, numerology, botany, and shamanic divination and healing, HFT becomes an ‘outsider artist’ whose works are collected by oligarchs, bankers, and museums, much like in the mainstream art world.

Automóvel
© » KADIST

Cinthia Marcelle

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Cinthia Marcelle’s video work Automóvel (2012) re-edits the mundane rhythms of automotive traffic into a highly compelling and seemingly choreographed meditation on sequence, motion, and time. Shot from an aerial vantage, the camera tracks the daily commute on a small stretch of concrete highway. The camera films the traffic below in short five-second excerpts before blacking out; time begins to collapse as the video shifts between scene, and the hours compress into minutes as daylight quickly turns into night.

Flag (Thames) 2016
© » KADIST

John Gerrard

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Flag (Thames) 2016 depicts a small section of the Thames River—one that is adjacent to the Palace of Westminster in London—as an algorithmic representation on an LED panel. The river color is vividly represented with reflections of buildings along the riverbank, including Big Ben. At the center of the scene sits a simulated gasoline spill.

Being and/or Time
© » KADIST

Ken Okiishi

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Ken Okiishi’s work Being and/or Time consists of every image taken with Okiishi’s iPhone over the period of three years in his hometown of New York. Flickering in chronological order at 24 images per second with 25,000 images in total. A visual diary of the digital age it simultaneously stages the city itself as a time-­image continuously remade by its own resident-­users.

Alexandre da Cunha

Anthony McCall

Charles Avery

Cerith Wyn Evans

Toby Ziegler

Amalia Pica

Wolfgang Tillmans

Cinthia Marcelle

Michael Landy

Tomoko Yoneda

Lydia Gifford

Lydia Gifford was born in 1979...

Ximena Garrido Lecca

John Gerrard

For more than two decades, John Gerrard has produced media work that has harnessed the emergent technologies of programming languages and gaming engines, and transmuted them into landscapes and portraits of ever increasing intricacy and autonomy...

Jeremy Deller

Ken Okiishi

Ken Okiishi’s practice explores subjects such as the psychogeography of cities, memory formation, and global data streams...

Joscelyn Gardner

Joscelyn Gardner is a Caribbean / Canadian visual artist working primarily with printmaking and multimedia installation...

Suzanne Treister

In the 1980s, Suzanne Treister’s practice was concerned primarily with painting...

Mike Cooter

Mike Cooter’s practice interrogates the place of the artist in society and his implication in reality, indeed in most of his projects he works with third parties et integrates them into the artistic process...

Walead Beshty

Rivane Neuenschwander

Hiraki Sawa

© » THEARTNEWSPER

about 3 months ago (02/05/2024)

Roman funerary bed found in central London Art market Museums & heritage Exhibitions Books Podcasts Columns Technology Adventures with Van Gogh Search Search Archaeology news Roman funerary bed found in central London Archaeologists are "blown away" by the levels of preservation of the finds at Holborn Viaduct, which also include five oak coffins, a decorated lamp, a glass vial, and jet and amber beads Maev Kennedy 5 February 2024 Share The funerary bed being excavated and a reconstruction © MOLA A Roman oak bed, on which a dead person may have been carried to a grave now lying six metres below the surface of modern London, has been excavated along with a wealth of startlingly well preserved finds spanning many centuries, by archaeologists working in advance of a huge office development at Holborn Viaduct...

© » THEARTNEWSPER

about 3 months ago (02/02/2024)

Man dies after fall from Tate Modern Art market Museums & heritage Exhibitions Books Podcasts Columns Technology Adventures with Van Gogh Search Search London news Man dies after fall from Tate Modern Police are not treating the event as suspicious Gareth Harris 2 February 2024 Share Tate Modern in London was the site of a fatal incident on 2 February Photo by Steve Daniels, via Wikimedia Commons A man has died after he fell from Tate Modern gallery in London today (2 February), according to the Metropolitan Police...

© » THEARTNEWSPER

about 3 months ago (02/02/2024)

Museum of the Home's displays will change to reflect changing times Art market Museums & heritage Exhibitions Books Podcasts Columns Technology Adventures with Van Gogh Search Search Museums & Heritage news Museum of the Home's displays will change to reflect changing times The 20th-century displays in the London institution’s Rooms Through Time galleries are being overhauled to reflect the diverse communities of Hoxton, the historic core of east London and one of the UK’s most gentrified areas Maev Kennedy 2 February 2024 Share An 1830 drawing room in the Museum of the Home’s Rooms Through Time galleries...

© » 1854 PHOTOGRAPHY

about 3 months ago (02/01/2024)

Remembering Brian Griffin (1948-2024) - 1854 Photography Subscribe latest Agenda Bookshelf Projects Industry Insights magazine Explore ANY ANSWERS FINE ART IN THE STUDIO PARENTHOOD ART & ACTIVISM FOR THE RECORD LANDSCAPE PICTURE THIS CREATIVE BRIEF GENDER & SEXUALITY MIXED MEDIA POWER & EMPOWERMENT DOCUMENTARY HOME & BELONGING ON LOCATION PORTRAITURE DECADE OF CHANGE HUMANITY & TECHNOLOGY OPINION THEN & NOW Explore Stories latest agenda bookshelf projects theme in focus industry insights magazine ANY ANSWERS FINE ART IN THE STUDIO PARENTHOOD ART & ACTIVISM FOR THE RECORD LANDSCAPE PICTURE THIS CREATIVE BRIEF GENDER & SEXUALITY MIXED MEDIA POWER & EMPOWERMENT DOCUMENTARY HOME & BELONGING ON LOCATION PORTRAITURE DECADE OF CHANGE HUMANITY & TECHNOLOGY OPINION THEN & NOW Martin In my Room Elsynge Road Wandsworth, London, 1977...

© » LONDONIST

about 3 months ago (01/25/2024)

Beautiful Paintings Of London Theatres | Londonist Beautiful Paintings Of London Theatres By Paul Tracey Paul Tracey Beautiful Paintings Of London Theatres In a follow up to the book in which he painted 100 piers, Paul Tracey has now turned his attention to the theatres of London...

© » FLASH ART

about 5 months ago (12/19/2023)

"The Big Chill" Bernheim Gallery / London | | Flash Art Flash Art uses cookies strictly necessary for the proper functioning of the website, for its legitimate interest to enhance your online experience and to enable or facilitate communication by electronic means...

© » FLASH ART

about 5 months ago (12/19/2023)

Maja Čule "Electronic Witches" Arcadia Missa / London | | Flash Art Flash Art uses cookies strictly necessary for the proper functioning of the website, for its legitimate interest to enhance your online experience and to enable or facilitate communication by electronic means...

© » FLASH ART

about 5 months ago (12/18/2023)

The Velvet and the Machine: Gucci Cosmos in London | | Flash Art Flash Art uses cookies strictly necessary for the proper functioning of the website, for its legitimate interest to enhance your online experience and to enable or facilitate communication by electronic means...

© » THEARTNEWSPER

about 5 months ago (12/18/2023)

East London's Vestry House Museum to undergo £4.5million redevelopment Art market Museums & heritage Exhibitions Books Podcasts Columns Technology Adventures with Van Gogh Search Search Museums & Heritage news East London's Vestry House Museum to undergo £4.5million redevelopment The funds to reimagine the museum are part of a wider £17.2m Levelling Up allocation that will help to bolster the district's arts credentials Alexander Morrison 18 December 2023 Share The Vestry House Museum today Courtesy of Vestry House Museum Tucked away in Walthamstow village, the Vestry House Museum has long been an important, if modest, archive of the east London district's history...

© » THE GUARDIAN

about 5 months ago (12/17/2023)

Jeremy Grayson obituary | Photography | The Guardian Skip to main content Skip to navigation Skip to navigation Jeremy Grayson photographed Shirley Bassey, Sammy Davis Jr and Marlon Brando Jeremy Grayson photographed Shirley Bassey, Sammy Davis Jr and Marlon Brando Obituary Jeremy Grayson obituary My father, Jeremy Grayson, who has died aged 90, was a professional photographer who worked over the years for clients including the BBC, Radio Times, Talk of the Town and the London Palladium...

© » LONDONIST

about 5 months ago (12/17/2023)

Playful Sculpture To Playing Videogames: January's Hottest London Exhibitions | Londonist The Top Exhibitions To See In London: January 2024 By Tabish Khan Tabish Khan The Top Exhibitions To See In London: January 2024 Looking for an awesome London exhibition this January? Here's our roundup of must-see shows in the capital 1...

© » HYPERALLERGIC

about 5 months ago (12/13/2023)

Hiroshi Sugimoto’s Time-Traveling Lens Skip to content Hiroshi Sugimoto, "Lake Superior, Cascade River" (1995), gelatin silver print (all photos AX Mina/Hyperallergic) LONDON — The first image at the Hayward Gallery’s show of work by Japanese photographer Hiroshi Sugimoto is a pair of upright apes walking through a volcanic landscape...

© » HYPERALLERGIC

about 5 months ago (12/11/2023)

What We Lose When Curating Follows the Money Skip to content Gerhard Richter, "Tante Marianne" (1965), oil on canvas (all photos Olivia McEwan/ Hyperallergic ) LONDON — Something feels off from the introductory lines of the exhibition booklet for Tate Modern’s Capturing the Moment ...

© » HYPERALLERGIC

about 5 months ago (12/07/2023)

How the Impressionists Captured Life on Paper Skip to content Edgar Degas, "Dancers on a Bench" (c...

© » FLASH ART

about 5 months ago (12/05/2023)

Marina Xenofontos "Public Domain" Camden Arts Centre / London | | Flash Art Flash Art uses cookies strictly necessary for the proper functioning of the website, for its legitimate interest to enhance your online experience and to enable or facilitate communication by electronic means...

© » HYPERALLERGIC

about 5 months ago (12/05/2023)

Women’s Oppression Is the Earth’s Oppression Skip to content Laura Aguilar, "Nature Self-Portrait #5" (1996) (© Laura Aguilar Trust of 2016) LONDON — The tradition of landscape photography is entwined with a patriarchal settler-colonial perspective...

© » BOOOOOOOM

about 5 months ago (12/01/2023)

"A Walk After Snow" by Aritst Lucy (Jiachun) Hu Submit A poetic collection by London-based artist and illustrator Lucy (Jiachun) Hu ...

© » LONDONIST

about 5 months ago (11/29/2023)

The Biggest Exhibitions To See In London This Winter | Londonist The Biggest Exhibitions To See In London This Winter By Tabish Khan Tabish Khan The Biggest Exhibitions To See In London This Winter Our pick of the best exhibitions to see in London's galleries and museums this winter...

© » LONDONIST

about 5 months ago (11/24/2023)

Vintage London Palladium Programmes | Londonist In Pictures: Vintage London Palladium Programmes By Robert Opie Robert Opie In Pictures: Vintage London Palladium Programmes Robert Opie, collector and author of numerous works on British nostalgia and ephemera — and founder of London's Museum of Brands — has shared his collection of vintage programmes from the London Palladium with us...

© » ARRESTED MOTION

about 6 months ago (11/17/2023)

Showing: José Parlá – ‘Phosphene’ @ Ben Brown (London) « Arrested Motion Closing today after a four week run, Phosphene is José Parlá ’s second show at Ben Brown Fine Art ’s London location...

© » LONDONIST

about 6 months ago (11/16/2023)

Photos Of Punk Bands In 1970s London Punk Bands In 1970s London: Rescued And Never-Before-Seen-Photos By Will Noble Will Noble Punk Bands In 1970s London: Rescued And Never-Before-Seen-Photos The Jam...

© » LONDONIST

about 6 months ago (11/14/2023)

London Now Has Its First Statue Of Queen Elizabeth II | Londonist London Now Has Its First Statue Of Queen Elizabeth II By Will Noble Will Noble London Now Has Its First Statue Of Queen Elizabeth II This is London's first public statue of the Queen...

© » FRANCE24

about 9 months ago (08/09/2023)

War of words over China breaks out on London graffiti wall - France 24 Skip to main content War of words over China breaks out on London graffiti wall Issued on: 09/08/2023 - 15:42 02:27 War of words over China breaks out on London graffiti wall (2023) © AFP / France 24 Video by: Juliette MONTILLY Follow Long renowned as a graffiti artist's heaven, Brick Lane in east London has found itself at the heart of a furious political debate overseas after a group of Chinese art students spray-painted Communist Party slogans over one of its walls...

© » FRANCE24

about 10 months ago (07/07/2023)

Lost Rembrandt portraits fetch more than $14 mn at auction - France 24 Skip to main content Lost Rembrandt portraits fetch more than $14 mn at auction Issued on: 07/07/2023 - 11:50 Modified: 07/07/2023 - 11:53 01:24 Video by: Yinka OYETADE The last known pair of Rembrandt portraits in private hands sold for more than £11 million ($14 million) at Christie's in London on Thursday -- nearly 200 years after they first went under the hammer at the auction house...

© » ARRESTED MOTION

about 15 months ago (02/22/2023)

Showing: Beyond The Streets (London) « Arrested Motion The art establishment has a less than distinguished history when it comes to embracing artists who fall outside of its comfortably familiar linear narrative of western art...

© » GAS

about 33 months ago (08/28/2021)

Gas Gallery will be showing for the first time at the forthcoming Photo London Fair at Somerset House from 8 - 12 September showing the work of 2 abstract photographers Christine Wilkinson and Jo Bradford Jo Bradford's three new collections launching at Photo London are under the headings of Hours, Minutes and Seconds...

© » GAS

about 33 months ago (08/26/2021)

Gas Gallery will be showing for the first time at the forthcoming Photo London Fair at Somerset House from 8 - 12 September...

© » HIGH FRUCTOSE

about 52 months ago (01/24/2020)

Unit London is hosting a retrospective and memorial show to honor the late Tom French, the brilliant young painter who lost his battle with cancer on Christmas Day 2019...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 56 months ago (09/13/2019)

Diasporic Dispatches: "The Cardboard Kitchen Project" by FK Co-Lab | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia Articles Courtesy of FK Co-Lab September 14, 2019 By Rebecca Goh (977 words, 6-minute read) We step into the dimly-lit theatre of The Lion & Unicorn , a soft, almost dream-like blue wash over the noticeable emptiness of the stage – save for a skeletal cardboard cut-out resembling a door frame, carefully set stage left...

© » ARTREPORT

about 101 months ago (01/27/2016)

15 Minutes With Studio Leigh Director Tayah Leigh Barrs – Art Report News ARTISTS Artist Highlights Artist Interviews Studio Visit VIDEOS ART+ Community Listicles No Result View All Result News ARTISTS Artist Highlights Artist Interviews Studio Visit VIDEOS ART+ Community Listicles No Result View All Result No Result View All Result 15 Minutes With Studio Leigh Director Tayah Leigh Barrs by December Projects Jan 27, 2016 in Featured 0 Portrait of Director, Tayah Leigh Barrs...

© » KADIST

about 52 months ago (02/01/2020)

© » KADIST

about 73 months ago (05/14/2018)

© » KADIST

about 87 months ago (03/17/2017)

© » KADIST

about 108 months ago (06/10/2015)

© » KADIST

about 118 months ago (08/27/2014)

© » KADIST

about 127 months ago (11/20/2013)

© » KADIST

about 130 months ago (09/10/2013)

© » KADIST

about 146 months ago (05/12/2012)

© » KADIST

about 150 months ago (01/03/2012)

© » KADIST

about 169 months ago (06/02/2010)

© » KADIST

about 188 months ago (12/01/2008)

© » KADIST

about 223 months ago (01/11/2006)