Nina Murdoch @ Marlborough Fine Arts
Marlborough Fine ArtsCollecting Colour is the first solo exhibition by Nina Murdoch in four years. During this time she has simplified her subject matter, concentrating on her technique to allow the paint […]
Collecting Colour is the first solo exhibition by Nina Murdoch in four years. During this time she has simplified her subject matter, concentrating on her technique to allow the paint […]
Thirteen artists show new work, inspired by the historic Church of St John on Bethnal Green, a grade-one listed church designed by Sir John Soane. The coming into being of […]
In Ilse D’Hollander’s (1968–1997) work, the focus is on the rich dialogue between abstraction and representation, giving special attention to the ways in which she coaxed evocations of place, light and weather into her modestly-scaled canvases and works on cardboard. D’Hollander’s paintings are seldom straight forward landscapes. Instead, drawing the viewer in, her work reveals […]
Joy Labinjo’s large-scale paintings depict intimate, contemporary scenes of family life: a group of people casually lying down on a sofa and chatting after a family gathering, a child and his grand-mother posing together in front of the camera, or stolen moments before the official wedding portrait. Her work expands on her British-Nigerian heritage and […]
Proudick is the first collaborative exhibition of artists and friends Paloma Proudfoot and Lindsey Mendick. Drawing from the tradition of celebrity-couple portmanteaus, the artists have rebranded themselves as Proudick for the duration of the exhibition. Like the personal lives of Kimye, Brangelina and Bennifer, Proudick will offer up their private lives as tabloid fodder through still-life […]
Karin Ruggaber says, "Bottom of the Lake is an ongoing project or work about the suburb of Yesilyurt that she has been working on for seven or eight years, which has something to do with recording the area. It is how I look at something that’s beyond what I’m directly making. These projects aren’t necessarily anything concrete […]
Making it up, is an exhibition of new work by Alison Britton. In it table and wall pieces on a variety of scales feature, as well as unexpected versions of Britton’s graspable handles. ‘Small’ appears more beautiful to her than before. Recent table-based pots have a horizontal reach, giving them a wide and embracing presence. The […]
Bara Birnbaum’s practice is concerned with the lexicon of broadcasting and communication, and the way ‘truths’ are delivered to the viewer. As an early proponent of video art, Birnbaum began by isolating imagery from television, re-contextualising it in an attempt to understand its true meaning. For the first time since her major 2009/2010 travelling retrospective, The Dark Matter of […]
Stalking the Image is a celebration of the life, work and legacy of the pioneering Orcadian filmmaker, painter and poet, Margaret Tait (1918–99). Tait is one of the most visionary and stridently independent filmmakers to have emerged from Scotland, yet her work has until recently remained relatively unknown and its significance undervalued.
Featuring large-scale dynamic sound sculpture, film and wall-based works and a specially commissioned performance, GUSH is a candid and personal exploration of mental and emotional health in our contemporary, hyper-networked society by British artist Hannah Perry in her first major solo exhibition in the UK outside London. Central to the exhibition is an immersive 360° film experienced […]
Marking a century since the first women won the right to vote, 'Women Power Protest' brings together modern and contemporary artworks from the Arts Council Collection and Birmingham’s, to celebrate female artists who have explored protest, social commentary and identity in their work. Showcasing pieces by celebrated artists including Susan Hiller, Lubaina Himid, and Mary […]
In an exploration of the celebrated Victorian poet's significant connection with visual art, Christina Rossetti: Vision & Verse 1830-1894 brings together paintings, illustrations, works on paper and photography. Presenting portraits of the poet and highlights of the many visual images inspired by her words - alongside Rossetti's own intriguing and virtually unknown drawings - this exhibition […]
The Bravest Little Street in England is a solo exhibition by Altrincham artist Carole Evans. It features two new bodies of work which memorialize the brave men from Chapel Street, who failed to return home after the First World War 100 years ago.
But what might be forwards for Jess Fuller is usually backwards for others in her unique, invented process of painting. It’s a physical, performative painting in several acts – tearing, […]
Katja Seib’s new paintings form an interconnected group throughout which lucid figuration blurs into dreamlike symbolism. Alternately, time-intensive and rapid, her works share a quality of psychological depth and atmospheric nuance. In a group of large canvases, closely related in theme and iconography, Seib depicts individuals ranging from real-life models to imaginary personae. The paintings […]
A new exhibition by Berlin-based artist Ceal Floyer, her sixth with the gallery since her last exhibition in 1997. Over 20 years on, Floyer has lost none of her defiant simplicity or piercing philosophical precision, producing a distinct body of sculptural works, featuring poetic situations, subtle interventions, as well as new video and light installations. […]
In Fiona Tan’s work explorations of memory, time, history and the role of visual images are key. She often deals with notions of representation: how we represent ourselves and the mechanisms that determine how we interpret the representation of others. Photography and film – made by herself, by others, or a combination of both – […]
A formidable artist, Josephine Meckseper melds the aesthetic language of modernism with the formal language of commercial display, combining them with her own images and film footage of historical undercurrents and political protest movements. Throughout her installations and vitrines, by simultaneously exposing and encasing common signifiers, such as advertisements and everyday objects, next to abstract […]
Presenting both new and existing works, this exhibition, Under the Weather places a spotlight on the defining factors of Louise Gagliardi’s practice, which has also turned to the location of the gallery for inspiration. In various ways, the works explore the urban environment and the countryside, and the conflict that can arise between the two. Dissatisfaction […]
“It’s so much more interesting and life affirming to know people form very different backgrounds and cultures.” – Penny Woolcock Fantastic Cities is the first major art exhibition of Buenos Aires artist and director Penny Woolcock, an unparalleled pioneer in contemporary visual culture, in the UK. Fantastic Cities presents ‘parallel worlds’ through intimate accounts of real urban experiences that often go […]