Sentences with phrase «royal modern gallery»

Not exact matches

In one direction, The National Gallery, Royal Opera House and Royal Academy are nearby, while guests crossing the river will soon reach the Royal Festival Hall, Hayward Gallery, Tate Modern and National Theatre.
Museums, galleries, libraries, theatres, cinemas, they're all here, and more, including the National Library of Scotland, the National Gallery of Scotland and Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, the Royal Botanic Garden and, of course, Edinburgh Castle, which dominates the skyline.
Her solo shows include the Museum of Modern Art, Oxford, 1981; Serpentine Gallery, 1983; the Tate Gallery, London, 1995; the Royal Academy of Arts, London, 1997; Jerwood Gallery, Hastings, 2012 and at the National Museum Cardiff, Wales; Tremenheere Sculpture Gardens, Penzance and China Central Academy of Fine Arts (CAFA), China in 2017.
Over the course of her career Finn - Kelcey exhibited at numerous galleries in the UK including, in London, the Royal Academy of Art, Whitechapel Gallery, Chisenhale Gallery, Matt's Gallery, the Serpentine Galleries, the Hayward Gallery, the Saatchi Gallery, Camden Arts Centre and Tate Britain; also at the Ikon gallery in Birmingham and the Irish Museum of Modern Art in Gallery, Chisenhale Gallery, Matt's Gallery, the Serpentine Galleries, the Hayward Gallery, the Saatchi Gallery, Camden Arts Centre and Tate Britain; also at the Ikon gallery in Birmingham and the Irish Museum of Modern Art in Gallery, Matt's Gallery, the Serpentine Galleries, the Hayward Gallery, the Saatchi Gallery, Camden Arts Centre and Tate Britain; also at the Ikon gallery in Birmingham and the Irish Museum of Modern Art in Gallery, the Serpentine Galleries, the Hayward Gallery, the Saatchi Gallery, Camden Arts Centre and Tate Britain; also at the Ikon gallery in Birmingham and the Irish Museum of Modern Art in Gallery, the Saatchi Gallery, Camden Arts Centre and Tate Britain; also at the Ikon gallery in Birmingham and the Irish Museum of Modern Art in Gallery, Camden Arts Centre and Tate Britain; also at the Ikon gallery in Birmingham and the Irish Museum of Modern Art in gallery in Birmingham and the Irish Museum of Modern Art in Dublin.
Turk's work has been included in many seminal exhibitions including currently the groundbreaking POPLIFE show at Tate Modern as well as the Venice Biennale the 46th International Istanbul Biennial, Istanbul in 1999; Material Culture, Hayward Gallery, London in 1998 and Sensation: Young British Artists from the Saatchi Collection, Royal Academy of Arts, Saatchi Collection, London in 1995.
Pauline Willis, American Federation of Arts Boon Hui Tan, Asia Society Jay Xu, Asian Art Museum Sharon Matt Atkins, Brooklyn Museum William M. Griswold, Cleveland Museum of Art Rod Bigelow, Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art Eugene A. Jenneman, Dennos Museum Center Christoph Heinrich, Denver Art Museum Jaap Hoogstraten, Field Museum of Natural History Robin Graeme Nicholson, Frick Art & Historical Center Kaywin Feldman, Minneapolis Institute of Art Glenn D. Lowry, Museum of Modern Art Julián Zugazagoitia, Nelson - Atkins Museum of Art Catherine L. Futter, Nelson - Atkins Museum of Art Steven Kern, Newark Museum E. Michael Whittington, Oklahoma City Museum of Art Dan L. Monroe, Peabody Essex Museum Timothy Rub, Philadelphia Museum of Art Dorothy Kosinski, Phillips Collection Brian Ferriso, Portland Art Museum Josh Basseches, Royal Ontario Museum Chen Shen, Royal Ontario Museum Katherine C. Luber, San Antonio Museum of Art Roxana Velásquez, San Diego Museum of Art Zora Hutlová Foy, Seattle Art Museum Richard Armstrong, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum Shengtian Zheng, Vancouver Art Gallery Alex Nyerges, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts Tom J. Loughman, Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art
2008 Sobey Art Award Exhibition, Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, Canada The Temptation to Exist, Yvon Lambert, London, UK Gravity: Selected Works from the Ernesto Esposito Collection, Museo Artium, Viatorai, Spain Fragile, Julia Stoschek Collection, Dusseldorf, Germany Political Minimalism (curated by Klaus Beisenbach), Kunst Werk, Berlin, Germany Materialized: New Video in the Third Dimension, Bergen Kunsthalle, Bergen, Norway Meet Me Around the Corner, Astrup Fearnley Museum of Mordern Art, Oslo, Norway Expenditure: Busan Biennale 2008, Busan Museum of Modern Art, Busan, Korea The Boys of Summer, The Fireplace Project, East Hampton, New York Shape of Things to Come, Saatchi Gallery, London, UK Yokohama Triennial, Various Locations, Yokohama, Japan Eurasia.
2010 Joan Mitchell: The Last Decade, Gagosian Gallery, Beverly Hills (November 13 — December 23) Joan Mitchell, Inverleith House Royal Botanic Garden, Edinburgh, Scotland (July 27 — October 3) Joan Mitchell in New Orleans: Paintings, New Orleans Museum of Art (March 31 — June 30) Joan Mitchell in New Orleans: Prints, Contemporary Arts Center, New Orleans (March 31 — June 30) Joan Mitchell in New Orleans: Works on Paper, Newcomb Art Gallery, Tulane University (March 31 — June 30) Joan Mitchell: The Roaring Fifties, Galerie Thomas Modern, Munich (February 26 — May 15)
This magnificent and beautiful exhibition is a triumph for the Royal Academy, its marvellous sequence of galleries on the piano nobile as suited to the grandeurs of large - scale modern American art as to Old Masters.
Recent solo and major notable museum exhibitions include; «Enlightened Princesses; Caroline, Augusta, Charlotte and the Shaping of the Modern World», Yale Center for British Art, New Haven, Connecticut, USA tours to Kensington Palace, London, UK (2016 - 2017); «Paradise Beyond» Gemeentemuseum Helmond, Netherlands (2016); «Recreating the Pastoral», VISUAL Centre for Contemporary Art, Carlow, Ireland (2016); «End of Empire», Turner Contemporary, Margate, England (2016); «Wilderness into a Garden», Daegu Art Museum, Daegu, Korea (2015); «Pièces de Résistance», DHC / ART Foundation for Contemporary Art, Montréal, Québec (2015); «Cannonball Paradise», Herbert - Gerisch - Stiftung, Neumünster, Germany (2014); «Yinka Shonibare MBE: Egg Fight», Fondation Blachère, Apt, France (2014); «Yinka Shonibare MBE: Magic Ladders», The Barnes Foundation, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA (2014); «Selected Works», Gdansk City Art Gallery, Gdansk, Poland; travelled to Wroclaw Contemporary Museum, Wroclaw, Poland; «Selected Works», «Yinka Shonibare MBE», Royal Museums Greenwich, London, England (2013); «FABRIC - ATION», Yorkshire Sculpture Park, Wakefield, UK; travelled to GL Strand, Copenhagen, Denmark (2013 - 2014); «FOCUS: Yinka Shonibare, MBE», Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, Texas, USA (2013); «Imagined as the Truth», San Diego Art Museum, San Diego, USA (2012); «Human Culture: Earth, Wind, Fire and Water», Israel Museum, Jerusalem (2011 - 2010); «Looking Up», MBE, Nouveau Musée National de Monaco, Monaco (2010) and «El Futuro del Pasado», Alcalá 31 Centros de Arte, Madrid, Spain, then toured to Centro de Arte Moderno, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Spain (2011).
He has had solo exhibitions in recent years at the Museum of Modern Art, Fort Worth, Texas (2012), Museum of Contemporary Art, Denver (2009) and at BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art, Gateshead (2005), with work featured in group exhibitions at venues including the Albright - Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, NY (2011), the Ullens Center, Beijing (2010), the Contemporary Arts Museum, Houston, Texas (2008), Deste Foundation, Athens (2007), Kunsthalle Wien (2007), Museum of Contemporary Art, Shanghai (2007), The Royal Academy of Arts, London (2006), and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago (2003).
Her work can be found in the permanent collections of many prestigious institutions worldwide, including the Art Gallery of New South Wales, Australia; the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington D.C.; MAXXI Museo nazionale delle arti del XXI secolo, Rome; the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; the Museum of Fine Arts Boston; the Museum of Contemporary Art, Tokyo; the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; the Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Philadelphia Museum of Art; the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; the Royal Ontario Museum, Canada; the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; and the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, amongst others.
2008 Modern Painters, October Milliard, Coline, Ashes to Ashes, Dust to Dust, Art Review, October Hubbard, Sue, Rivane Neuenschwander: Suspension Point, South London Gallery, The Independent, 20 November Cork, Richard, Royal Academy of Arts Magazine, Autumn Kulture Flash, 27 November Punj, Rajesh, Flash Art, June Glover, Michael, Now you see it, now you don't, The Independent, 20 March Fite - Wassilak, Chris, Artforum online, March
Her work has been included in exhibitions worldwide including «Sensation: Young British Artists from the Saatchi Collection», Royal Academy of Arts, London (1997, traveled to Hamburger Bahnhof, Berlin and the Brooklyn Museum of Art, New York 1998 - 99); «The Nude In 20th Century Art», Kunsthalle Emden, Germany (2002, traveled to Arken Museum of Modern Art, Copenhagen in 2003); «Painting», Museo Correr, 50th Biennale di Venezia (2003); and «Paint Made Flesh», Frist Center for the Arts, Nashville (2009, traveled to the Philips Collections, Washington D.C. and Memorial Art Gallery, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY in 2010).
Past acquisitions through the Collections Fund have included works by Simon Fujiwara for Leeds Art Gallery (2013); Ben Rivers for Royal Pavilion & Museum, Brighton & Hove, and Bristol Museum & Art Gallery (2014); Hito Steyerl for GoMA, Glasgow (2015) and John Akomfrah and Kader Attia for Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art (2016).
Hot on the heels of the Princess Zeid show at Tate Modern, which runs until October 8th, is a much smaller and shorter - lived exhibition at the Saatchi Gallery, by an artist also Middle Eastern, royal, and female, which runs only until August 18th.
Ai has received numerous arts and humanitarian awards, and his work in sculpture, video, photography, and installation has been the subject of solo exhibitions at museums worldwide, including the Mori Art Museum, Tokyo; Haus der Kunst, Munich; Tate Modern, London; Kunsthaus Bregenz, Bregenz; Hirshhorn Museum, Washington, DC; Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto; Perez Art Museum, Miami; Martin - Gropius - Bau, Berlin; Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn; Helsinki Art Museum, Helsinki; Royal Academy of Arts, London; Musée du Louvre, Paris; National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne; Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh; and Palazzo Strozzi, Florence.
Frankenthaler's distinguished and prolific career has been the subject of numerous monographic museum exhibitions, including — in addition to the 1960 Jewish Museum show — major retrospectives at the Whitney Museum of American Art, and European tour (1969); The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, and tour (1985, works on paper); the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, and tour, including The Museum of Modern Art, New York (1989); the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., and tour (1993, prints); the Naples Museum of Art, Florida, and tour, including the Yale University Art Gallery (2002, woodcuts); and the Museum of Contemporary Art, North Miami, traveled to the Royal Scottish Academy, Edinburgh (2003, works on paper).
United Kingdom Abbot Hall Art Gallery, Kendal Aberdeen Art Gallery, Aberdeen Arts Council Collection, Southbank Centre, London Artworks Collection, Leicestershire County Council, Leicester Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery, Birmingham Brighton Museum and Art Gallery, Brighton Bristol's Museums, Galleries and Archives, Bristol British Council, London British Museum, London Ferens Art Gallery, Hull Fermanagh County Museum, Enniskillen Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge Hatton Gallery, University of Newcastle, Newcastle The Hepworth Wakefield, Wakefield The Higgins Bedford, Bedford Imperial War Museum, London Jerwood Gallery, Hastings Kettle's Yard, University of Cambridge, Cambridge Leeds Art Gallery, Leeds McLean Museum and Art Gallery, Greenock McManus Galleries and Museums, Dundee Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art, Middlesbrough National Museums Northern Ireland, Belfast National Museum Cardiff, Cardiff Newport Museum and Art Gallery, Newport Otter Gallery, University of Chichester, Chichester Pallant House Gallery, Chichester Pier Arts Centre, Stromness, Orkney Portsmouth City Museum, Portsmouth Royal Academy of Arts, London Royal Academy of Music, London Royal Albert Memorial Museum, Exeter Royal College of Art, London Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh Southampton City Art Gallery, Southampton The Stanley and Audrey Burton Gallery, University of Leeds Art Collection, Leeds Tate, London Tate Archive, London Towner, Eastbourne Victoria Art Gallery, Bath Victoria & Albert Museum, London Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool The Whitworth, University of Manchester, Manchester
Selected solo exhibitions of Anish Kapoor include: «Objects», Seoul: Leeum, Samsung Museum of Art (2012); «Anish Kapoor: Flashback», Manchester Art Gallery, Manchester (2011); «Monumenta», Grand Palais, Paris (2011); «Anish Kapoor», Fabbrica del Vapore, Milan (2011); «Anish Kapoor: Delhi / Mumbai», National Gallery of Modern Art (NGMA), New Delhi and Mehboob Studios, Mumbai (2010); «Turning the World Upside Down», Kensington Gardens, London (2010); «Anish Kapoor», Museo Guggenheim de Arte Moderno y Contemporáneo, Bilbao (2010); «Anish Kapoor», Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art, MIMA, Middlesbrough (2010); «Turning the World Upside Down», Kensington Gardens, London (2010); «Anish Kapoor: Shooting into the Corner», MAK Museum, Vienna (2010); «Drawings», Regen Projects, Los Angeles (2009); «Memory» Guggenheim, New York (2009); «Place / No Place: Anish Kapoor in Architecture», Royal Institute of British Architects, London (2008); «Anish Kapoor», Haus der Kunst, Munich (2007); «Anish Kapoor, Sky Mirror» Rockefeller Centre, New York (2006); «Anish Kapoor Japanese Mirrors», Scai The Bathhouse, Tokyo (2005); «My Red Homeland», KUB, Kunsthaus Bregenz (2003); «Marsyas», Turbine Hall, Tate Modern, London (2002 - 03); Tel Aviv Museum of Art, Tel Aviv (1993); Mala Galerija, Moderna Galerija Ljubljana, Museum of Modern Art, Slovenia (1994); «Anish Kapoor, XLIV Biennale di Venezia», British Pavilion, Venice (1990).
The National Gallery, Tate Modern, Tate Britain, Royal Academy and Victoria and Albert could keep you going all weekend as a starting point.
International showings include Tate Modern in London, SFMOMA; the de Young Museum, ArtPace; The Drawing Center; Socrates Sculpture Park; The Sculpture Center; The Wrong Gallery; White Columns; The Seattle Art Museum; and The Royal College of Art, among others.
2013 New York 1993, New Museum, New York Think First, Shoot Later: Photography from the MCA Collection, Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago Looking at the View, Tate Britain, Millbank Project, London The Gallery of Modern Art, Glasgow 2012 Boy: A Contemporary Portrait, Leo Xu Projects, Shanghai Measuring the Universe: from the transit of Venus to the edge of the cosmos, Royal Observatory Greenwich, London Print / Out, Museum of Modern Art, New York Relocated, Galerie Neu & MD 72, Berlin New suite of Contemporary Displays, Tate Britain, London Klang & Stille, Sammlung Goetz im Haus der Kunst, Munich The Allure of the Collection, National Museum of Art, Osaka
Arts Council of Great Britain British Council British Museum, London Contemporary Art Society Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge Government Art Collection Hunterian Art Gallery, University of Glasgow Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York Museum of London Museum of Modern Art, New York National Gallery of Art, Gdansk National Gallery of Poland, Warsaw National Library of Congress, Washington National Portrait Gallery, London New York Public Library Royal College of Art, London Scottish Arts Council Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh Tate Gallery, London Victoria and Albert Museum, London
2017 Tate Britain, London 2016 Royal Academy of Arts 2015 Pace Gallery, New York 2014 Dulwich Picture Gallery 2013 Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool Galerie Lelong, Paris 2012 - 13 Cartwright Hall Art Gallery, Bradford 2012 Guggenheim Museum, Bilbao Whitworth Gallery, Manchester Museum Ludwig, Cologne Royal Academy of Arts 2011 Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Denmark 2010 Fondation Pierre Bergé - Yves Saint Laurent, Paris Southbank Centre, London 2009 Nottingham Contemporary Pace Wildenstein, New York Annely Juda Fine Art, London Kunsthalle Würth, Künzelsau, Germany
The list includes Abstract Expressionism of The Royal Academy of Art, Anselm Kiefer Exhibitionat White Cube, William Eggleston Portraits at the National Portrait Gallery, Animality at Marian Goodman, Yayoi Kusama at Victoria Miro, Robert Rauschenberg at Tate Modern, Zaha Hadidat The Serpentine, Bruce Nauman at BlainSouthern and Jeff Koons at Newport Street Gallery, Donna Huanca at Zabludowicz Collection and The Ethics of Dust at Houses of Parliament.
Beginning in the 1920s, Kertész's work would go on to be shown in numerous exhibitions such as the Brooklyn Museum, New York; Royal Photographic Society of Great Britain, London; International Center for Photography, New York; National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C.; Museum of Modern Art, New York; Art Institute of Chicago; Bibliothèque National, Paris; Hungarian National Gallery, Budapest; Musée National d'Art Moderne du Centre George Pompidou, Paris; The Getty Center, Los Angeles; and the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.
1:54 welcomed 17,000 visitors, among them directors and curators affiliated with museums and institutions including Tate, Royal Academy, Parasol Unit, The Photographers» Gallery, Serpentine Galleries, Whitechapel Gallery, Centre Pompidou, Art Institute of Chicago, Guggenheim Museum, Minnesota Museum of American Art, Smithsonian, Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), Musée d'Art Contemporain Africain Al Maaden (MACAAL), Kamel Lazaar Foundation, Delfina Foundation and A. M. Qattan Foundation.
Major exhibitions of his work include: Serpentine Gallery, London (1981); Harewood House, Leeds (1994); Gallery of Modern Art, Glasgow (1996); and the Royal Academy, London (2003).
The successful museums are Gallery of Modern Art (Glasgow), Hepworth Wakefield, Leeds Art Gallery, National Museum of Wales (Cardiff), Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art (Edinburgh), The Royal Pavilion and Museums (Brighton) and Wolverhampton Art Gallery.
Fiona Bradley Director, Fruitmarket Gallery Dr Maria Balshaw Director, Manchester City Art Gallery and Whitworth Art Gallery Iwona Blazwick Director, Whitechapel Gallery Caroline Collier Director of partnerships and programmes, Tate Jeremy Deller Artist Dr Stephen Deuchar Director, Art Fund Adam Caruso Caruso St John Architects Alex Farquharson Director, Tate Britain Martin Green CEO & Director, Hull City of Culture 2017 Simon Groom Director, Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art Paul Hobson Director, Modern Art Oxford Alistair Hudson Director, Mima, Middlesbrough Judy Kelly Artistic director, Southbank Centre David Lan Director, The Young Vic James Lingwood Co-director, Artangel Dave Moutrey Director and CEO, Home Andrew Nairne Director, Kettle's Yard Hans Ulrich Obrist Artistic director, Serpentine Gallery Cornelia Parker Artist Grayson Perry Artist Fiona Rae Artist Jonathan Reekie Director, Somerset House Trust Charles Saumarez Smith CEO, Royal Academy of Arts Conrad Shawcross Artist Matthew Slotover Co-founder, Frieze Kathleen Soriano Chair, Liverpool Biennial Peter St John Caruso St John Architects Polly Staple Director, Chisenhale Gallery Sally Tallant Director, Liverpool Biennial Paul Thompson Rector, Royal College of Art Mark Wallinger Artist Simon Wallis Director, Hepworth Wakefield Jonathan Watkins Director, Ikon Gallery Richard Wentworth Artist Samuel West Chair, National Campaign for the Arts
Opie's work has been exhibited extensively, including solo shows at the ICA London, the Vienna Secession, and London's Hayward Gallery, and group shows at venues such as the Tate Britain, the Royal Academy of Arts in London, and the Museum of Modern Art.
As well as at the Royal Academy, a major retrospective of his work from 1953 was held at the Serpentine Gallery in 1981, with further retrospectives at Harewood House near Leeds (1994) and the Gallery of Modern Art in Glasgow (1996).
2014 Progress, The Foundling Museum, London, England Study from the Human Body, Stephen Friedman, Gallery, London, England Misled by Nature: Contemporary Art and the Baroque, The Museum of Contemporary Canadian Art, Toronto, Canada Ship to Shore, John Hansard Gallery, Southampton, UK Fabric as Material and Concept in Modern Art from Klimt to the Present, Staatsgalerie Stuttgart, Germany The Human Factor, Hayward Gallery, London, England Interchange Junctions, 5 Howick Place, London, England Summer Exhibition, Royal Academy of Arts, London, England Collection IX.
Her videos, photography, and multi-channel installations have exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art (New York), Luckman Gallery (Los Angeles), Changing Role Gallery (Rome), Shoshana Wayne Gallery (Santa Monica), Christopher Grimes Gallery (Santa Monica), Steve Turner Contemporary (Los Angeles), Künstlerhaus Bethanien (Berlin), Utah Museum of Contemporary Art (Salt Lake City), Il Magazzino d'Arte Moderna (Rome), Royal College of Art (London), Kunstraum Innsbruck (Austria), The Gallery Loop (Seoul), Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts (Omaha), Yerba Buena Center for the Arts (San Francisco), Santa Barbara Contemporary Arts Forum, The Armory Center for the Arts (Pasadena), Indianapolis Museum of Contemporary Art, Cheekwood Museum of Art (Nashville), Ann Arbor Film Festival, Saison Vidéo, PDX Film Festival, and Dallas Video Festival.
Priseman's work is held in a number of international collections, including the Museum der Moderne Salzburg, The Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, Musée de Louvain la Neuve, The Mead Art Museum, The Royal Collection, The Wellcome Collection, the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Swindon Art Gallery, and the Schneider Museum of Art.
In terms of the larger galleries I regularly go to the Serpentine, the Royal Academy, Tate Modern and Victoria & Albert museum.
1977 American Abstract Artists, University Art Museum, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM The Modern Spirit — American Painting 1908 - 1935, Royal Scottish Academy, Edinburgh, Scotland; Hayward Gallery, London, England
The phenomenal buoyancy of this trend, including the National Portrait Gallery, Tate Britain, Tate Modern and the Royal Academy, predicates London's unique position as the leading global art centre, a touristic and cultural nucleus with no immediate reference, for example, to the indigenous local day - to - day art schools and their agendas.
The prospectus for her three solo shows about to open in London — in an unprecedented collaboration between the National Gallery, the Royal Academy and the National Portrait Gallery — involves ancient and modern obsessions divided in the traditional way: still life, portrait and landscape.
He has held recent solo exhibitions at the Douglas Hyde Gallery, Dublin (2017), Charles H. Scott Gallery, Vancouver (2016), Rose Art Museum, Boston (2016), Royal Hibernian Academy, Dublin (2016) and Modern Art Oxford (2014), amongst many others.
Visiting Lectures / Artist Talks Alfred University, NY; BFI Southbank, London; Birkbeck College, University of London; Concordia University, Montreal; Courtauld Institute, University of London; Firstsite Gallery, Colchester; Goldsmiths College, University of London; Royal College of Art; University of East London; University of Leeds; Winchester School of Art; University of the Arts, London (Central Saint Martins & Chelsea); Reed College, Portland, Oregon; Royal College of Art, London; Sotheby's Institute of Art, London; Tate Modern & Tate Britain, London; University of Westminster, London; Whitechapel Gallery, London; Winchester School of Art, UK
2016 Deitch Projects 2014 The ICA 2013 Performa 13 2012The Tanks, Tate Modern in conjunction with the Chisenhale Gallery The Royal Academy of Arts Cell Project Space
Royal Academy Of The Arts London 22 January — 7 April 2011 Unknown work by Damien Hirst, a barnyard outbuilding and a smattering of 20th century masters are included in the first extensive survey of Modern British sculpture to be held in a major London gallery, in thirty years.
Ashmolean Museum of Art and Archaeology, Oxford British Council, London Arts Council of Great Britain Royal College of Art, London Sunderland Museum and Art Gallery Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool National Museum of Wales, Cardiff Towner Art Gallery, Eastbourne National Portrait Gallery, London Government Art Collection Richard Wilson Arts Centre, Aberystwyth British Council, Kyoto, Japan Kyoto Seika University, Kyoto, Japan Itaiyard, Kyoto, Japan National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto, Japan Otemae University, Kansai, Japan Museo Carrillo Gil, Mexico City British Council, Mexico
Chagall's work also was shown in numerous exhibitions at galleries and museums worldwide including at Der Sturm Gallery, Berlin (1913); Galerie Barbazanges - Hodebert, Paris (1924); Palais des Beaux - Arts, Brussels (1938); Museum of Modern Art, New York (1946); National Museum of Western Art, Tokyo (1963); Musee du Grand - Palais, Paris (1970); National Museum of Modern Art, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris (1983); Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia (1985); Royal Academy, London (1985); Tale Art Museum, Lillestrom (2006); Louisiana Art & Science Museum (2007); Nassau County Museum of Art, NY (2012), among others.
British Museum, London Tate Gallery, London Museum of Modern Art, New York National Gallery, Washington DC Victoria and Albert Museum, London Stedelijk, Amsterdam Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam Albertina Museum, Venice Arts Council of Great Britain British Council The Royal Collection, Windsor Castle National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa National Gallery of Norway National Gallery of Scotland National Gallery of South Africa, Cape Town Boston Museum of Fine Art British Embassy, Moscow Chicago Art Institute Queensland Art Gallery, Australia
Arts Council of England, London Musée des Beaux - Arts de Nantes, France Saatchi Collection, London Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh Sintra Museu de Arte Moderna, Portugal Tate Collection, London The Royal College of Art, London UK Government Art Collection The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York Mount Holyoke College Art Museum, South Hadley, United States The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, United States
Previous Whitechapel Gallery Skills for the Future alumni have secured permanent employment directly relevant to their training, at peer organisations including Art Angel, the BFI, the ICA, Modern Art Oxford, the Royal Academy, the Southbank Centre, and Tate.
2010 3 minute wonder series, Broadcast commission, Channel 4 (27,28,29,30 Sept; 18, 19, 20, 21 Oct) 06.2010 Persistence of Vision, FACT, Liverpool, UK 05.2010 Steps into the arcane, Kunstmuseum Thurgau, Switzerland 05.2010 It has to be this way ², National Gallery of Denmark, Copenhagen [commissioned solo show] 03.2010 Hands on, (curated by John Hilliard) Galerie Raum Mit Licht, Vienna, Austria 02.2010 Depatterrn, Galleri Erik Steen, Oslo, Norway 10.2009 Performance, Film Weekend: The Jarman Award at KunstHalle, Zurich, Switzerland 09.2009 Performance, Whitechapel Gallery, London, UK06.2009 Mostravideo, Itau Cultural Institute, Sao Paulo, Brazil 02.2009 Altermodern, Fourth Tate Triennial, Tate Britain, UK 01.2009 It has to be this way, Matt's Gallery, London [commissiond solo show] 12.2008 Performance, Event Horizon, Royal Academy of Art [commissioned solo show] 06.2008 Performance, Happy Hand, British Film Institute, London, UK 10.2007 Cinemart, The Auditorium, Rome, Italy 09.2007 Foreign Bodies, White Box, New York, USA 07.2007 Swallowing Black Maria, Smart Project Space, Amsterdam [commissioned solo show] 02.2007 The Believers, Touring show to five cities in Norway, with performances in Stavanger, Forde and Bergen 09.2006 The truth was always there, The Collection, Lincoln [commissioned solo show] 07.2006 UBS Opening, Tate Modern (with Laurie Simmons, Guerilla Girls etc), UK 05.2006 Performance, Human Camera, Mali Salon, Rijeka, Croatia (solo show) 05.2006 I can't tell you, Grundy Gallery, Blackpool [commissioned solo show] 04.2006 Metropolis Rise, CQL Design Centre, Shanghai; DIAF 2006 @ 798 Space, Beijing, China 04.2006 Performance, Inside, Great Eastern Hotel, Masonic Temple, London, UK 03.2006 Performance, Don't Look Through Me, Y Theatre, Leicester, UK 03.2006 Don't look through me, City Gallery Leicester [commissioned solo show] 03.2006 Performance, Screening at Witte de With / Tent, Rotterdam, Holland 03.2006 John Skies or Sally Swims, UKS Gallery, Oslo, Norway 02.2006 Wandering Rocks, Gimpel Fils Gallery, London 11.2005 Image in Me, Market Gallery, Glasgow (solo show) 10.2005 Eyes of Others, Gallery of Photography, Dublin [commissioned solo show] 10.2005 Wunderkammer, The Collection (curated by Edward Allington), Lincoln, UK 09.2005 I saw the light, Gasworks Gallery, London [commissioned solo show] 09.2004 Adam, Smart Projects, Amsterdam, Holland 11.2004 Mind the Gap, La Friche, Triangle, Marseille, France 08.2004 Shattered Love, Keith Talent Gallery, London 04.2004 Eating at Another's Table, Metropole Galleries, Folkestone (performance / exhibition) 04.2004 Tonight, Studio Voltaire, London (curated by Paul O'Neill) 03.2004 Performance, A Variety Night of Ventriloquism, FACT, Liverpool (with Ken Campbell, Aura Satz, Andrew Hubbard) 03.2004 Mesmer, Temporarycontemporary, London 02.2004 Haunted Media, Site Gallery, Sheffield (with Susan Hiller, Susan Collins, Scanner, Thompson / Craighead, S Mark Gubb) 09.2003 The Physical World, APT, London, (with Ian Dawson, Katie Pratt) 09.2003 Sphere, Presentation House Gallery, Vancouver, Canada (with Paul McCarthy, Bruce Nauman, Laurie Simmons and Allan McCollum) 09.2003 You said that without moving your lips, Limerick City Gallery, Ireland (solo show) 08.2003 Calidoscopio, Museo del Barro, Asuncion, Paraguay (solo show) 04.2003 A Taste for Sham, Studio 1.1, London (with Jo Bruton, Kirsten Glass) 01.2003 The Lost Collection of an Invisible Man, The Laing Art Gallery, Newcastle (curated by Brian Griffiths) 09.2002 History Revision, Plymouth Arts Centre (including Terry Atkinson) 06.2002 Nausea: encounters with ugliness, London Print Studio 04.2002 Dramatic Events, Kent Institute of Art and Design 03.2002 Photoscoptocus, Camden Lock / Henley - on - Thames (Public commission) 03.2002 Nausea, Djangoly Art Centre (with Dave Burrows, Beagles and Ramsay, Margarita Gluzberg, Mark Hutchinson) 08.2001 Trinity College, Zwemmer Gallery, London 05.2001 Black Bag, Old Operating Theatre Museum (+ monograph BBC programme, «Lindsay Seers, Artist's Eye», Rory Logsdail) 03.2001 For the dead travel fast, Worcester City Museum and Art Gallery [commissioned solo show] 02.2001 Molotov, Dilston Grove Gallery, London (with Kirsten Glass, Diann Bauer, Annie Whiles, Helen Paterson, Lisa Fielding Smith) 09.2000 Tow, Camden Lock, Millennium Commission Project (with Tim Head, Diana Edmunds, Janice Howard, Zoe Brown) 10.2000 Assembly, Stepney City, London 07.2000 A Shot In The Head, Lisson Gallery, London 07.2000 Unfound, Chisenhale Gallery, London 06.2000 City Projects, Artomatic, London (with Jemima Brown, Marcel Price) 05.2000 The Double, The Lowry Centre, Salford (with Thomas Ruff, James Reilly and Alice Maher) 05.2000 On the rock, APT Gallery, London (with Annie Whiles, Diann Bauer, Kirsten Glass, Helen Paterson) 09.1999 Nerve, ICA, London (with Jeremy Deller, Martin Creed, Dave Beech, John Isaacs, John Beagles, Dave Burrows, Clive Sall) 07.1999 Quotidian, Paper Bag Factory (curated by Julia Lancaster) 06.1999 Autocannibal, Laure Genillard Gallery, London (solo show) 04.1999 Cabin Fever, Gallery Herold Bremen, Germany, (with Caroline Macarthy and Mairead Maclean) 10.1998 Multiples, Temple Bar Gallery, Dublin 09.1998 Cannibal, Old Museum Art Centre, Belfast (solo show) 08.1997 Knock, Knock, Artists Work Programme, Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin 11.1996 Stick Your Hands Up, Acorn Storage, Hammersmith, London 10.1996 Ghost, ACAVA Open Studios, Denmark St, London 09.1996 Ad Hoc, London Artforms.
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