The exhibition at Guildhall Art Gallery showcases rarely seen images from the De Morgan Foundation’s collection. It invites visitors to immerse themselves in Evelyn De Morgan’s artistic process, explore her illustrious career, and uncover the cultural influences that shaped her work.
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The Prince includes two major new bodies of work by Chantal Joffe. The first series of four large-scale paintings shows Joffe’s partner, Richard. The second series depicts the writer Charlie Porter in the immediate aftermath of the death of both his parents. This major retrospective will be the first in over 25 years, and will chart the development of Helen Chadwick’s art from her renowned degree show piece In the Kitchen (1977) through to her Piss Flowers (1991–2). Another Chance Encounter will present new paintings by Lubaina Himid in a special installation made in collaboration with Magda Stawarska and ‘interventions’ throughout the Kettle’s Yard house. Renowned Australian artist Emily Kam Kngwarray (1910-1996) created compelling, powerful works that reflect her extraordinary life as a senior Anmatyerre woman from the Utopia region of Australia. Created in collaboration with the National Gallery of Australia (NGA), this will be the first large-scale presentation of Kngwarray’s work ever held in Europe and a celebration of […] Nour Jaouda is a Libyan artist based between London and Cairo. This exhibition is her first institutional solo exhibition. Jaouda’s fluid, multi-layered textile works traverse the languages of painting, sculpture and installation to produce ‘landscapes of memory’. The forms, colours and motifs within her intricately textured surfaces gesture towards different encounters across time and space, […] In her exhibition Rounds, Lucy Raven brings together moving image and sculpture, to examine themes of cyclical violence and unrelenting force in the formation of the Western United States. Celebrating over twenty years of extraordinary practice, this exhibition celebrates internationally acclaimed Japanese photographer Rinko Kawauchi’s (b. 1972), whose poetic images find beauty in the ordinary moments of everyday life. Her first major UK exhibition since 2006 centres around the series M/E – letters which stand for both ‘Mother’ and ‘Earth’ and ‘Me’ – moving between explorations […] |
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