Chair Poetics: envisioning anonymity
19–30 September 2009
Ordinary, everyday chairs become critical tools when reconfigured to ask questions about our relationship to utility, familiarity, obsolescence, sustainability and value.
19–30 September 2009
Ordinary, everyday chairs become critical tools when reconfigured to ask questions about our relationship to utility, familiarity, obsolescence, sustainability and value.
8–27 June 2009
The artist slashes, cuts and dissects printed matter, which she then manipulates and re-constructs into extravagant, ornamental sculptural paper-works.
1–23 May 2009
Clay Perry’s photographs of London’s avant-garde art scene in the 1960s, shown together in this exhibition with works from the time.
14 March–14 April 2009
Ten artists take on the metropolis, including Stuart Brisley, Johanna Piesniewski, George Charman, Morag Ballard, Michael Buhler, Alberto Duman, Brian Griffin, Chris Kenny, Harald Smykla, Jason Wallis-Johnson.
14–18 January 2009
Artists include: Martin Bradley, Stuart Brisley, George Charman, Alberto Duman, Brian Griffin, Albert Herbert, Liliane Lijn, Cornelia Parker, Grayson Perry, William Pye, Peter Sylveire, Sophie Tauber-Arp, Paule Vézelay.
13 December 2008–12 January 2009
For more than five decades, Herbert painted dream-like images. His poetic vision was in British art’s metaphysical tradition that extends from William Blake to Cecil Collins.
15 November–8 December 2008
Griffin’s diverse career has encompassed both commercial and fine art photography, film, audio-visual performance, fashion photography and books.
15 October–8 November 2008
Works by: Stuart Brisley, William Green, Tina Keane, Georgia Russell, Harald Smykla and Jason Wallis-Johnson.
20 September–11 October 2008
Works from 1960s London to Los Angeles today by the Australian artist and film-maker Philippe Mora.
Through August until 13 September 2008
A changing exhibition of works by contemporary Gallery artists and Modern British works from private collections.