Download Public Cv

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Download Public Cv Arts Council of England Ashmolean Museum, Oxford Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery, Birmingham British Council British Museum, London Design Museum, London Eton College, Windsor Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge Hampshire County Council, Winchester Henry Moore Foundation, Leeds Jesus College, Cambridge Jupiter Artland, Edinburgh Leeds City Art Gallery, Leeds Manchester Art Gallery, Manchester National Galleries of Scotland, Edinburgh New Art Centre, Salisbury Pallant House Gallery, Chichester Royal Academy of Arts, London Science Museum, London Southampton City Art Gallery, Southampton South London Gallery, London Tate, London Victoria & Albert Museum, London Wellcome Collection, London Yorkshire Sculpture Park, Wakefield Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia Art Gallery of Western Australia, Perth, Australia National Gallery of Australia, Canberra, Australia National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, Australia Museum Moderner Kunst Stiftung Ludwig Wien, Vienna, Austria Sammlung Essl, Klosterneuburg, Austria Lhoist Collection, Brussels, Belgium Middelheim Museum, Antwerp, Belgium Art Gallery of Ontario, Canada Montreal Musée des Beaux Arts, Canada Guangdong Museum of Contemporary Art, Guangzhou, China Arken Museum of Modern Art, Ishøj, Denmark HEART Herning Museum of Contemporary Art, Herning, Denmark Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Humblebaek, Denmark Espoo Museum of Modern Art, Espoo, Finland Sastamoinen Collection, Finland Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris, France Fonds national d'art contemporain, Paris, France Musée d'Art Classique de Mougins, France Kunsthalle Bremen, Germany Kunsthalle zu Kiel, Germany Museum Würth, Künzelsau, Germany Neanderthal Museum, Mettmann, Germany Neue Galerie, Museumslandschaft Hessen Kassel, Germany Sammlung Wemhöener, Berlin, Germany SCHAUWERK Sindelfingen, Sindelfingen, Germany Asia Society, Hong Kong M+ Museum, Hong Kong Museum MACAN, Jakarta, Indonesia Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin, Ireland University of Limerick, Limerick, Ireland Israel Museum, Jerusalem, Israel Uffizi Gallery, Florence, Italy CAMUSAC Cassino Museum of Contemporary Art, Cassino, Italy Galleria d'Arte Moderna, Turin, Italy Benesse House Museum, Naoshima, Japan Hakone Open-Air Museum, Hakone, Japan Iwaki City Art Museum, Fukushima, Japan Kirishima Sculpture Park, Kyushu, Japan Koriyama City Museum of Art, Koriyama, Japan National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo, Japan Nagoya City Art Museum, Nagoya, Japan Sapporo Sculpture Park, Hokkaido, Japan Takaoka Art Museum, Toyama, Japan Tokushima Art Museum, Tokushima, Japan Tokyo Opera City Art Gallery, Tokyo, Japan Wakayama Prefectoral Museum, Wakayama, Japan Gemeentemuseum Den Haag, The Netherlands Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam, The Netherlands Museum Voorlinden, Wassenaar, The Netherlands Astrup Fearnley Museet for Moderne Kunst, Oslo, Norway Museet for Samtidskunst, Oslo, Norway Tjuvholmen Skulpturpark, Oslo, Norway Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, Lisbon, Portugal Fundação Berardo, Sintra, Portugal State Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg, Russia Arario Museum Collection, Seoul, South Korea Kyung-Mee Park, PKM, South Korea Leeum Samsung Museum, Seoul, South Korea Bonnier Collection, Stockholm, Sweden Malmo Konsthall, Malmo, Sweden Moderna Museet, Stockholm, Sweden Umedalen Sculpture Foundation, Umea, Sweden Wanås Konst, Knislinge, Sweden Weltkunst Foundation, Zurich, Switzerland Pinchuk Art Centre, Kiev, Ukraine Davidson College, Davidson, North Carolina, USA deCordova Sculpture Park & Museum, Lincoln, Massachusetts, USA Denver Art Museum, Denver, Colorado, USA Frederik Meijer Gardens and Sculpture Park, Grand Rapids, Michigan, USA The Goss-Michael Foundation, Dallas, Texas, USA Gund Gallery at Kenyon College, Gambier, Ohio, USA Hall Art Foundation, Reading, Vermont, USA Hirschhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington D.C., USA Marguiles Foundation, Florida, USA MIT List Visual Arts Center, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA Museum of Modern Art, Fort Worth, Texas, USA Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, California, USA Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego, California, USA Nasher Sculpture Center, Dallas, Texas, USA Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art, Johnson County Community College, Kansas, USA Linda Pace Foundation, San Antonio, Texas, USA Norton Museum of Art, Palm Beach, Florida, USA Palm Springs Art Museum, California, USA Phillips Collection, Washington D.C., USA Phoenix Art Museum, Phoenix, Arizona, USA San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco, California, USA Smart Museum of Art at the University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, USA Taubman Museum of Art, Virginia, Roanoke, USA Try-me, Richmond, Virginia, USA Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA Yale Center for British Art, New Haven, Connecticut, USA.
Recommended publications
  • Hot Tickets 2019 Food and the Gut Go on Show As Angolan ‘Sea Monsters’ Resurface and Alexander Von Humboldt Pops Into Focus
    COMMENT BOOKS & ARTS A visitor examines some of Leonardo da Vinci’s writing at the Water as Microscope of Nature exhibition at the Uffizi Gallery in Florence, Italy. Hot tickets 2019 Food and the gut go on show as Angolan ‘sea monsters’ resurface and Alexander von Humboldt pops into focus. The year is also a feast of anniversaries, from the eclipse proving Albert Einstein right to Leonardo da Vinci’s death — and the first footfall on the Moon. Nicola Jones reports. Alexander von Humboldt Sea Monsters Unearthed: Life in Angola’s PaleoAngola unearthed a new dinosaur Museum Ludwig, Cologne, Germany. Ancient Seas species, the long-necked sauropod Until 27 January. National Museum of Natural History, Angolatitan adamastor; a host of sea turtles Prussian polymath and explorer Alexander Washington DC. (pictured); and giant marine reptilian von Humboldt’s 250th birthday rolls Until 2020. plesiosaurs and mosasaurs. Full-scale around this September. The ‘father Some 130 million years ago, the reconstructions and fossils will be on of environmentalism’ is credited with supercontinent Gondwana was being display at the US National Museum of envisioning geology, ecology and humanity ripped apart, forming Africa and South Natural History. Meanwhile, the museum’s as part of an interconnected web. Less well America. The South Atlantic Ocean David H. Koch Hall of Fossils will open known is his role in early photography. emerged between them. Today, Angola is a on 8 June with Deep Time, featuring INNOCENTI/UFFIZI GALLERIES M. DEGL’ In 1839, Humboldt was among the first hotspot for tracking the sea’s biological 700 specimens and the return of a established scientists to embrace the record: it is the only African nation with Tyrannosaurus rex fossil.
    [Show full text]
  • Curating Queer British Art, 1861-1967 at Tate Britain and Being Human at Wellcome Collection, London
    Rejecting Normal: Curating Queer British Art, 1861-1967 at Tate Britain and Being Human at Wellcome Collection, London Clare Barlow Independent curator This item has been published in Issue 01 ‘Transitory Parerga: Access and Inclusion in Contemporary Art,’ edited by Vlad Strukov. To cite this item: Barlow С (2020) Rejecting normal: Curating Queer British Art, 1861-1967 at Tate Britain and Being Human at Wellcome Collection, London. The Garage Journal: Studies in Art, Museums & Culture, 01: 264-280. DOI: 10.35074/GJ.2020.1.1.016 To link to this item: https://doi.org/10.35074/GJ.2020.1.1.016 Published: 30 November 2020 ISSN-2633-4534 thegaragejournal.org 18+ Full terms and conditions of access and use can be found at: https://thegaragejournal.org/en/about/faq#content Curatorial essay Rejecting Normal: Curating Queer British Art, 1861-1967 at Tate Britain and Being Human at Wellcome Collection, London Clare Barlow There has been a number of exhibi- tember 2017) and Being Human tions in the last five years that have (September 2019–present). Drawing explored queer themes and adopted on my experience of curating these queer approaches, yet the posi- projects, I consider their successes tion of queer in museums remains and limitations, particularly with precarious. This article explores regards to intersectionality, and the the challenges of this museological different ways in which queerness landscape and the transformative shaped their conceptual frameworks: potential of queer curating through from queer readings in Queer British two projects: Queer British Art, Art to the explicit rejection of ‘nor- 1861—1967 (Tate Britain, April–Sep- mal’ in Being Human.
    [Show full text]
  • BLIND-LIGHT-Sean-Kelly-Gallery
    Sean Kelly Gallery 528 West 29 Street 212 239 1181 New York, NY 10001 www.skny.com ANTONY GORMLEY Blind Light October 26 – December 1, 2007 Sean Kelly is delighted to announce a major exhibition of new work by Antony Gormley. The opening of the exhibition will take place on Thursday, October 25th from 6pm until 8pm. The artist will be present. The centerpiece of Gormley’s ambitious exhibition is a room-sized installation that occupies the main gallery entitled Blind Light . Blind Light is a luminous glass room filled with a dense cloud of mist. Upon entering the room-within-a-room, the visitor is disoriented by the visceral experience of the fully saturated air, in which visibility is limited to less than two feet. The very nature of one’s sense of one’s own body and its relationship in space to others is challenged. In Gormley’s words: Architecture is supposed to be the location of security and certainty about where you are. It is supposed to protect you from the weather, from darkness, from un - certainty. Blind Light undermines all of that. You enter this interior space that is the equivalent of being on top of a mountain, or at the bottom of the sea. It is very important for me that inside it you find the outside. Also you become the immersed figure in an endless ground, literally the subject of the work. Blind Light was included this summer in Gormley’s hugely acclaimed exhibition at the Hayward Gallery, London, to unprecedented public and critical approbation.
    [Show full text]
  • 'Abstract' Portraits
    ‘Abstract’ portraits A learning resource featuring works from the National Portrait Gallery Collection, one of a series focusing on particular artists or themes which has changed the way we think about the art of portraiture. Page 2 of 16 National Portrait Gallery ‘Abstract’ portraits Contents Introduction ⁄ 2 1: A conceptual portrait ⁄ 3 2: Dominant features ⁄ 6 3: Mixed media and text ⁄ 8 4: Pattern and form ⁄ 10 5: Mass and material ⁄ 12 General enquiry questions ⁄ 14 Further research ⁄ 15 Introduction This resource looks at the broad themes encapsulated in the idea of an ‘abstracted’ portrait and questions whether such a portrait is possible and viable. A variety of themes group different types of portraits that could be termed ‘abstract’. The portraits selected in this resource are all in the Collection of the National Portrait Gallery. The resource is aimed primarily at teachers of pupils studying GCSE and A level art. Those studying art history may also find the images, concepts and discussions of relevance to their study. The content aims to give teachers information on the significance and stories of the sitter and artist, the purpose of the image and its impact at the time, and to examine connections between those sitters, artists and their images. The general enquiry questions together with themes and ideas for further discussion between teachers and students are designed to encourage ways to research, develop and record ideas and personal responses. Finally, there are web links for additional research. This resource complements and supports the learning programmes developed by the National Portrait Gallery. ‘Abstract’ portraits in context Can men and women be represented in ‘abstract ways’? Is the essential function of a portrait that it communicates what the sitter looks like and that it can be used for identity purposes? If this factor is subverted and the portrait no longer has this function, can it be true to the genre? Recognisable features from distinctive and famous faces can help make an ‘abstract’ portrait look more realistic and believable.
    [Show full text]
  • Guide to Liverpool Waterfront
    Guide to Liverpool Waterfront “Three Graces” – Together the Royal Liver Building, Cunard Building and the Port of Liverpool Building make up the Mersey’s ‘Three Graces’ and are at the architectural centre of Liverpool’s iconic waterfront. A massive engineering project has recently extended the canal in front of these three buildings, adding beautifully landscaped seating areas and viewpoints along the canal and the river. Museum of Liverpool – this brand new museum, opened in 2011 is a magnificent addition to Liverpool’s waterfront. Celebrating the origins and heritage of the city, it features collections from National Museums Liverpool that have never been seen before. Otterspool Promenade – The construction of Otterspool Promenade (1950) provided both a new amenity for Liverpool and an open space dividend from the disposal of Mersey Tunnel spoil and household waste; a project repeated three decades later to reclaim the future International Garden Festival site. A favourite with kite fliers this often overlooked wide open space is perfect for views of the river and picnics Antony Gormley’s “Another Place” - These spectacular sculptures by Antony Gormley are on Crosby beach, about 10 minutes out of Liverpool. Another Place consists of 100 cast-iron, life-size figures spread out along three kilometres of the foreshore, stretching almost one kilometre out to sea. The Another Place figures - each one weighing 650 kilos - are made from casts of the artist's own body standing on the beach, all of them looking out to sea, staring at the horizon in silent expectation. Mersey Ferry - There's no better way to experience Liverpool and Merseyside than from the deck of the world famous Mersey Ferry listening to the commentary.
    [Show full text]
  • MEDICINE: the WELLCOME GALLERIES CONFERENCE 23–24 January 2020 the Smith Centre, Science Museum, London
    MEDICINE: THE WELLCOME GALLERIES CONFERENCE 23–24 January 2020 The Smith Centre, Science Museum, London DAY 1 10.30–11.00 Registration/Tea & Coffee 11.00–11.15 Welcome—Julia Knights, Deputy Director, Science Museum Group 11.15–12.45 Panel 1: Introducing Medicine: The Wellcome Galleries . Chair: Natasha McEnroe, Keeper of Medicine, Science Museum . Katie Dabin, Curator of Medicine, Science Museum—‘Medicine & Bodies’ . Stewart Emmens, Curator of Community Health, Science Museum— ‘Medicine & Communities’ . Selina Hurley, Curator of Medicine, Science Museum—‘Medicine & Treatments’ . Sarah Bond, Curator of Medicine, Science Museum—‘Faith, Hope & Fear’ 12.45–1.45 Lunch 1.45–3.00 Curator-led Tours of Medicine: The Wellcome Galleries 3.00–4.30 Panel 2: Medicine Collections and Medical Museums in the 21st Century . Chair: Imogen Clarke, Assistant Curator of Medicine, Science Museum . Sophie Goggins, Curator of Biomedical Science, National Museums Scotland—‘Patient Voice in the 21st Century’ . Manon Parry, Professor of Medical History at the VU University, Amsterdam/Senior Lecturer in American Studies and Public History at the University of Amsterdam—‘Risky Histories & Social Relevance’ . James Peto, New Collections Gallery Project Director, Wellcome Collection—‘Re-animating Our Collections Through New Research’ . Adam Bencard, Associate Professor of Medical Humanities, Copenhagen Medical Museum—‘Exhibiting Complexity: Putting Unfinished Biomedical Science on Display’ 4.30–5.00 Coffee break 5.00–6.00 Keynote Lecture: Simon Chaplin, Director of Culture & Society, Wellcome – ‘The Museum of Human Miseries’ Chair: Tim Boon, Head of Research and Public History, Science Museum 6.00–7.00 Reception ▪ ▪ — — ▪ — — ▪ — • • — • — — • — ▪ ▪ — ▪ — ▪ — 2 Speaker Abstracts and Bios Katy Barrett: 'Art Commissions for Medicine: The Wei/come Galleries' Four of the five new Medicine Galleries at the Science Museum feature commissioned artworks, as well as a major loan from ARTIST ROOMS.
    [Show full text]
  • Press Release Antony Gormley
    Press Release New Exhibition meticulously constructed form in which mass and space create an implicit order. Rather than representing the Antony Gormley: body, or being concerned with appearance, this sculpture will become, like CO-ORDINATE IV, an instrument for SUBJECT projection, empathy and mindfulness. In the adjacent gallery will be EDGE III (2012), a solid 22 MAY 2018–27 AUGUST 2018 iron body that stands on the wall at the height of a bed. Its unusual placement, spinning the orientation of the This summer Kettle’s Yard will present ‘SUBJECT’ by space by 90 degrees, acting as a lever on the space Antony Gormley, the first solo artist exhibition to be prompting a sense of disequilibrium and suggesting that staged in Kettle’s Yard’s new galleries. Gormley’s the stability of the world and therefore our orientation site-specific installation will ambitiously push and test within it is relative. the boundaries of these spaces. The exhibition will include both new work and works not previously In the Clore Learning Studio will hang SLIP I (2007) a exhibited in the UK. work that maps a falling body in space using fine steel bars that follow a system of meridians familiar to us Taking as its basis the ‘coordinate’ as a means of from a geographer’s globe. This accurate mapping of the measurement of space and of the body as space, diving body is held within an expanded space frame ‘SUBJECT’ is conceived as a site-specific installation that derived from that same body. The inner body frame has will occupy the whole site, including both galleries, the fallen inside the outer.
    [Show full text]
  • Antony Gormley: Some of the Facts
    Antony Gormley: Some of the Facts Tate St Ives 16 June – 2 September 2001 Notes for Teachers As part of the ongoing development of resources for teachers we would like to encourage you to comment on how useful you have found this information and make any suggestions/additions to be incorporated during the exhibition and shared with other educationalists. E-mail [email protected] Call 01736 791114 Art is the means by which we communicate what it feels like to be alive…. Making beautiful things for everyday use is a wonderful thing to do – making life flow more easily – but art confronts life, allowing it to stop and perhaps change direction – they are completely different. Antony Gormley Things already exist. Sculpture already exists. The job is to transform what exists in the outer world By uniting it with the world of sensation, imagination and faith. Action can be confused with life. Much of human life is hidden. Sculpture, in stillness, can transmit what may not be seen. My work is to make bodies into vessels that both contain and occupy space. Space exists outside the door and inside the head. My work is to make a human space in space. Each work is a place between form and formlessness, a time between origin and becoming. A house is the form of vulnerability, darkness is revealed by light. My work is to make a place, free from knowledge, free from history, free from nationality to be experience freely. In art there is no progress, only art. Art is always for the future.
    [Show full text]
  • Akram Khan Company
    WELCOME TO AKRAM KHAN THE ROUNDHOUSE making before opening at the reimagining of the epic COMPANY Roundhouse, we are delighted Mahabharata – and pulls to be working in partnership audiences into Akram’s world, with Sadler’s Wells, as well as giving them a unique experience UNTIL THE LIONS one of the most extraordinary from every viewpoint. and instinctive collaborators I have come across, Akram Khan. I look forward to experiencing Akram has worked with world- this premiere performance once class artists from music, film, again and I very much hope you dance and theatre and watching enjoy it too. Photo: Ellie Pinney him in rehearsals last summer, I was able to witness his open Marcus Davey OBE and inclusive approach to the Chief Executive and In 1966, the Roundhouse creative process first hand. Artistic Director opened its doors for the first time as a cutting-edge arts This production was initiated venue, beginning with the by the 360° Network – a network legendary launch of radical of round artistic venues across underground newspaper, the the world – with Until the Lions International Times. In 2016 we especially created for our iconic started our 50th anniversary year Main Space. This also marks the with the world premiere of Until first time Akram has created a the Lions from one of the dance complete work for a 360-degree world’s most influential and setting. Our round Main Space respected figures, Akram Khan. allows him to explore a particular After a world tour of in-the- section of Karthika Naïr’s book round venues, the show returned Until the Lions: Echoes from to us in January 2019, but it is the Mahabharata – an original the special premiere, lovingly captured by our young film and broadcast team, that we are bringing to online audiences on the 27th August 2020.
    [Show full text]
  • Bulletin Automne 2011 [Pdf]
    SAISON 2011>12 SEASON FORTIER DANSE- [Québec] BULLETINAUTOMNE /FALL 2011 – VOL.11 – NO.1 CRÉATION SYLVAIN ÉMARD [Québec] DANSE EASTMAN COMPAGNIE VZW [Belgique/Belgium] MARIE [Québec] WWW.DANSEDANSE.NET CHOUINARD [Inde/India] SHANTALA SHIVALINGAPPA SOMMAIRE / CONTENTS Mot des codirecteurs / Word from the Co-directors 03 Fortier Danse-Création 04-09 English abbreviated version Eastman vzw 10-13 English abbreviated version Sylvain Émard Danse 14-17 English version Shantala Shivalingappa 18-23 English version COMPAGNIE MARIE CHOUINARD 24-27 English version Brèves / News 28-31 Une publication de Danse Danse en collaboration avec Place des Arts. / Published by Danse Danse in collaboration with Place des Arts. Directrice de la publication / Editor Clothilde Cardinal, Danse Danse. Coordonnatrice à l’édition / Coordinator (editorial) Anne Viau. Rédaction / Texts Les compagnies / The Companies, Marie-Élizabeth Roy. Collaboratrices / Contributors Fabienne Cabado, Michèle Febvre. Traduction / Translation Neil Kroetsch. Graphisme / Graphic design Gris Gris design graphique. Tirage / Circulation 10 000 exemplaires / copies. Bibliothèque nationale du Canada. Bibliothèque nationale du Québec : ISSN 1499-531X Bulletin-Danse Danse Photos page 1 : Fortier Danse-Création, interprète / dancer Paul-André Fortier, photo Ginelle Chagnon. Eastman vzw, interprètes / dancers Darryl E. Woods, Helder Seabra, Kazutomi Kozukison, Damien Fournier, James O’Hara, photo Maarten Vandenabeele. Sylvain Émard Danse, interprètes / dancers Laurence Ramsay, Manuel Roque, photo
    [Show full text]
  • Science Museum Group Human Remains Policy October 2018 Science Museum Group Human Remains Policy October 2018
    SCIENCE MUSEUM GROUP HUMAN REMAINS POLICY OCTOBER 2018 SCIENCE MUSEUM GROUP HUMAN REMAINS POLICY OCTOBER 2018 GOVERNING BODY: BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE SCIENCE MUSEUM DATE FOR APPROVAL: 2018 DATE FOR REVIEW: 2023 1. INTRODUCTION 1.1 The National Heritage Act 1983 requires the Science Museum Group (SMG) to: care for, preserve and add to the objects in the collection, exhibit them to the public and make them available for study and research; and to promote the public’s enjoyment and understanding of science and technology, and of the development of those subjects. 1.2 SMG museums share a mission to inspire futures by: • Creative exploration of science, technical innovation and industry, and how they made and sustain modern society; • Building a scientifically literate society, using the history, present and future of science, technology, medicine, transport and media to grow science capital; • Inspiring the next generations of scientists, inventors and engineers. 1.3 This policy supports the SMG strategic priority to sustain and grow our world-class collection and sets out the principles by which the SMG (the Science Museum, London, the Museum of Science and Industry, Manchester, the National Railway Museum, York and Shildon, and the National Science and Media Museum, Bradford) will make decisions about the management and display of the human remains. 1.4 Human remains have unique status within museum collections and must be treated with the highest standards of care and respect. SMG recognises the value of human remains - they can advance research and public understanding of cultural and medical practices, biological processes, genetics, diet, disease and population movements over time.
    [Show full text]
  • Alison Wilding
    !"#$%&n '(h)b&#% Alison Wilding Born 1948 in Blackburn, United Kingdom Currently lives and works in London Education 1970–73 Royal College of Art, London 1967–70 Ravensbourne College of Art and Design, Bromley, Kent 1966–67 Nottingham College of Art, Nottingham !" L#xin$%on &%'##% London ()* +,-, ./ %#l +!! (+).+0+ //0!112! 1++.3++0 f24x +!! (+).+0+ //0!112! 1+.)3+0) info342'5%#564'7%#n5678h79b#'%.68om www.42'5%#64'7%#n5678h79b#'%.68om !"#$%&n '(h)b&#% Selected solo exhibitions 2013 Alison Wilding, Tate Britain, London, UK Alison Wilding: Deep Water, Whitworth Art Gallery, Manchester, UK 2012 Alison Wilding: Drawing, ‘Drone 1–10’, Karsten Schubert, London, UK 2011 Alison Wilding: How the Land Lies, New Art Centre, Roche Court Sculpture Park, Salisbury, UK Alison Wilding: Art School Drawings from the 1960s and 1970s, Karsten Schubert, London, UK 2010 Alison Wilding: All Cats Are Grey…, Karsten Schubert, London, UK 2008 Alison Wilding: Tracking, Karsten Schubert, London, UK 2006 Alison Wilding, North House Gallery, Manningtree, UK Alison Wilding: Interruptions, Rupert Wace Ancient Art, London, UK 2005 Alison Wilding: New Drawings, The Drawing Gallery, London, UK Alison Wilding: Sculpture, Betty Cuningham Gallery, New York, NY, US Alison Wilding: Vanish and Detail, Fred, London, UK 2003 Alison Wilding: Migrant, Peter Pears Gallery and Snape Maltings, Aldeburgh, UK 2002 Alison Wilding: Template Drawings, Karsten Schubert, London, UK 2000 Alison Wilding: Contract, The Henry Moore Foundation Studio, Halifax, UK Alison Wilding: New Work, New
    [Show full text]