Marlene Steyn @ Lychee One
Lychee OneMarlene Steyn’s work is concerned with the relationship between painting and psychoanalysis, exploring the formation of reality and of self. Each painting offers a deep dive into the psyche, bringing […]
Marlene Steyn’s work is concerned with the relationship between painting and psychoanalysis, exploring the formation of reality and of self. Each painting offers a deep dive into the psyche, bringing […]
Working from her garden studio in Mirfield, West Yorkshire, Samantha Bryan has produced a new body of work for her exhibition at YSP celebrating 20 years of making, The Adventure […]
Carolee Schneemann (1939-2019): the exhibition 1955–1959 brings together significant nude figurative paintings and an early body of drawings, on view together for the first time. Made at a critical period of intellectual […]
In this exciting new installation, Linder brings together a series of objects alongside new and existing works to create a multi-sensory collage in dialogue with Duncan Grant and Charleston. A […]
This Retrospective highlights the abstract sculptures of Maria Bartuszová, who created around 500 sculptures, from small organic forms to commissions for public spaces, as well as works in the landscape, despite […]
Zadie Xa presents a new body of work commissioned by the Gallery, House Gods, Animal Guides and Five Ways 2 Forgiveness. It is an ambitious installation created by Xa, where […]
Keisha Scarville’s exhibition, Hot/Slow/Step, turns conceptually on the Caribbean limbo dance as a symbol of thresholds, the liminal, and the in between, through both abstract photography and sculpture. Using both narrative […]
Nettle Grellier's exhibition, She Always Does Have a Good Time, considers feral womanhood through several semi-autobiographical motifs: disobedient dogs, soft bodies, and disquieting, gossiping subjects. The exhibition uses references across high […]
Joy Revision, is an exhibition of work by Andra Ursuţa. The exhibition debuts new photograms and lead crystal sculptures that stem from a premodern conception of art as an essential tool […]
Avatar II is an exhibition of new works by Anne Imhof, which range from large scale aluminium panels, drawings and paintings to film and sound works that interweave notions of reality […]
LuYang’s work destabilises the divisions between past and future, human and machine, and life and death, reflected in the title of the exhibition, which incorporates the Sanskrit expression ‘Neti Neti’, […]
This exhibition features Olga de Amaral’s characteristic intertwined surfaces of linen or another base material warp, which is then encrusted in gesso and even adorned with gold leaf or palladium, […]
Dancers & Goddesses, is an exhibition, which represents the Estate of Nancy Spero (1926–2009). It focusses on a particularly productive time for the artist, 1984–96, Dancers & Goddesses shows the dynamic range of […]
Focusing on portraiture, interiors and landscapes, the show brings together a group of new paintings that Anne Rothenstein created in the last two years. Rothenstein’s enigmatic paintings are characterised by a […]
Focusing on her local neighbourhood in West London, Caroline Coon's exhibition, Love of Place, brings together a selection of the artist’s ‘Urban Landscapes’ made over the past twenty-five years. Scenes of […]
Heather Agyepong’s ego death is a project inspired by psychiatrist Carl Jung’s concept of ‘The Shadow’. According to Jung, the shadow is composed of aspects of one’s personality deemed inappropriate, that have […]
Joanne Coates’ The Lie of the Land is a body of work that explores the social history of the land and narrates a story of gender and class that has long […]
Exploring the ways in which our bodies encounter and process our environments; this exhibition looks at digestive systems on a micro and macro level. We dig in and out of […]
In Deliverance, Brittany Shepherd takes her fascination and sense of kinship towards fetishists partial to protective rainwear, or all that is Wet and Messy (WAM), to its logical conclusion: in her process […]
“This is an attempt to do something different, because in a normal exhibition you’re just a silent witness. At Modern Art Oxford, rather than just viewing artworks in front of […]