The highlight is upstairs in
the Wharf Road space where it's so thick with paint like it's reaching out towards us.
In Victoria Miro's
Wharf Road space, Jorge Pardo walks me around his freshly mounted eponymous exhibition hours before opening.
Not exact matches
There are wall based works in the Mayfair
space but
Wharf Road is the place to be.
In the
Wharf Road galleries the exhibition comprises three installations - one on each floor - that the artist has conceived as a series of different experiments that explore the construction and measurement of
space, mass, time, and volume through the use of materials.
Housed in the former Galleria Il Capricorno, Victoria Miro Venice will be the gallery's fourth exhibition
space, joining gallery sites in Mayfair and
Wharf Road, London.
In October 2006 the gallery expanded further by opening a second exhibition and viewing
space in an adjoining building on
Wharf Road.
This time they gave me a chance to use both
spaces in Mayfair and
Wharf Road.
In the
Wharf Road galleries, three installations run across the three floors as different experiments into the construction and measurement of
space, mass, time, and volume.
The cavernous upper
space at Victoria Miro's
Wharf Road gallery has seen a number of shows that were more events than exhibitions.
The Gallery is housed in a converted Victorian furniture factory on
Wharf Road, NI and with over 8,000 square feet of exhibition
space it is one of the largest commercial
spaces in London.
John Korner & Jules de Balincourt @ Victoria Miro Both the
Wharf Road and Mayfair
spaces hit us with searingly bright paintings.
Pierre d'Alancaisez founded Waterside Project
Space on
Wharf Road, East London in 2008.