Doris Hatt @ The Museum of Somerset
Doris Hatt was a Somerset pioneer of British modernism. She exhibited her vibrant works over almost five decades, beginning in 1920, and contributed to many exhibitions in the South West. […]
Doris Hatt was a Somerset pioneer of British modernism. She exhibited her vibrant works over almost five decades, beginning in 1920, and contributed to many exhibitions in the South West. […]
Pauline Alexander suffers from deafness and is interested in the part our senses play in creativity. She believes her deaf perspective offers a positive influence affecting colour, aesthetics and rationality enabling […]
Inspired by the Armada Portrait of Queen Elizabeth I; this exhibition is a new commission from photographer Susan Derges. Using both analogue and digital techniques the work, titled Mortal Moon, unpacks the […]
Lion Hunt, is Reena Spaulings' latest exhibition, which takes Eugène Delacroix’s 1854 painting The Lion Hunt (Fragment) and high-visibility yellow as points of departure to explore the idea of composition as an active […]
The three artists in this exhibition, Art, Obsession and Maturity, are united by long time obsessions with a theme. Sculptor Vanessa Pooley, photographer Julia Cameron and painter Mary Mellor all have […]
This major exhibition, Artist in Society, 1948-53 explores a short, yet significant, period in the life of one of Britain’s most celebrated artists, and highlights Barbara Hepworth’s little-known connection to Hertfordshire.
‘Girl Meets Girl’ presents four artists: Rose Wylie, Katherine Bernhardt, Katherine Bradford and Caroline Wells - who have arrived over the years at distinctive languages which they employ with a freshness and panache which reads as spontaneity. They don’t worry about boundaries: between life and fiction, between sexes and sexualities, between conscious and subconscious, between first […]
The Colour of Light is a selection of works from Louise Balaam's portfolio.
Mona And A Pair of Panties is a cheeky and innocent reference to Leonardo Da Vinci’s Mona Lisa (1503) - in this case, embroidered on a pair of socks, one of which had gone missing along with a pair of underwear, thus resulting in the title of this exhibition. Teasing such threads from art history, Jesse Kase hints […]
Crashing waves, sea spray and looming snow-topped mountains, Caroline Jane Harris’ latest body of work, A Three Dimensional Sky, adopts nature’s expanse as a lens through which to explore the relationship between image-making, subject and object. Extending traditional methods of photography, printmaking and drawing, as well as digital technologies, Harris creates meticulous hybrid artworks that traverse […]
Join us for a curator-led explanation of Diane Arbus' work at the Hayward Gallery. This exhibition explores the first seven years of photographer Diane Arbus’ career, from 1956 to 1962. Arbus made most of her photographs in New York City, where she was born and died. Her photographs of children and eccentrics, couples and circus performers, female […]
Dame Elizabeth Blackadder is one of our greatest artists: the first woman to be elected both to the Royal Scottish Academy and the Royal Academy, she was given the prestigious title of Her Majesty’s Painter and Limner in Scotland in 2001. She has had a long and distinguished career but her art remains quietly personal. […]
Catherine Biocca's installation, Complexity Cost, consists of a vinyl floor sticker, vinyl matt emulsion, PVC banner, video, industry marker on PVC, and a hand-carved travertine.
Jacki Baxter worked as a food stylist in the advertising industry, preparing, cooking and presenting food for photography in films, commercials and editorials. The composition, colours, shapes and textures and the crockery, utensils and props used in her food photography have resurfaced as a strong influence on her work. Her starting point is that everyday […]
Sarah Knight and Sara Sherwood are two artists with a shared focus on light, movement, texture and form in the art they each create. Although they work individually, Sarah and Sara are mutually inspired from nature and share a love of life to transfer these impressions and feelings onto works in various media in tranquil and joyous ways. In […]
Combining the handmade with the industrial, Beverly Fishman employs a variety of techniques to explore technological, scientific, and biological systems of perception and representation, instigating constructive conversations about the ways people see their bodies and minds, and construct their identities.
“Carve, Roll, Print” an exhibition of new lino-prints by Sangeeta Bhagawati, whose subjects are predominantly South Asian women. She tends to express feelings of rebellion, strength and communion, particularly if the subject of her print involves women and the body.
Lucy Marks is a contemporary painter working in oil and watercolour, whose dynamic compositions communicate the changing energy and movement within the landscape. Her works capture all energies of the land, sea and sky; from wild seas to quiet landscapes. She works directly in the environment and uses these sketches as her primary source back […]
French photographer Celine Bodin, presents in this exhibition two recent series: Light of Grace, and The Hunt. Re-enacting the suggestive gesture borrowed from Old Masters to 19th century paintings, the series 'Light of Grace' explores female representation’s conflict with ideals and beauty archetypes. By only suggesting identities and pictorial aesthetics, these photographs test the logic of […]
Rosebuds & Rivers, is Joan Snyder’s first solo exhibition in the UK, which comprises new and recent paintings. The exhibition includes a group of monumental triptychs and diptychs alongside smaller-scale works. It offers an insight into the experimentation and visual language for which Snyder is celebrated.