ArchigramWolverhampton Art Gallery (temporary installation)

Artists

Neville Gabie

Working in a range of media from sculpture to film and photography, Neville’s practice is focused on responding to locations which are in the process of change.

Nayan Kulkarni

At the heart of his work is an engagement with ideas of site specificity, time, technology and perception. These interests are manifested in work that is generated from specific concepts, processes or places through diverse media such as light, video, installation, sculpture and photography.

Susanna Heron

Susanna Heron is an artist who has gained international recognition for her collaborations with architects and large-scale site specific works since the completion of major commissions for The British Embassy in Dublin and The Council Building for the European Union in Brussels in 1995.

Vong Phaophanit & Claire Oboussier

Vong Phaophanit and Claire Oboussier have worked together for over 20 years. Their collaborative work encompasses, films, books, large- scale installations and sculptural works.

Timorous Beasties

Timorous Beasties is noted for its surreal and provocative textiles and wallpapers. By depicting uncompromisingly contemporary images on traditional textiles and wallpapers, Timorous Beasties has defined an iconoclastic style of design once described as ‘William Morris on acid’.

Claire Morgan

Claire Morgan is a visual artist with a strong interest in the organic, in natural processes, and in the bodily connotations of natural materials.

Esther Rolinson

Esther digitally animates found and self-generated images and her work explores the architectural applications of three dimensional structures, animated light designs, and digital technologies.

Dryden Goodwin

Central to his practice is a fascination with drawing, often combining drawing with photography, film and large-scale screen-based installations with soundtracks. His work has explored the physical and emotional dynamics of different environments, such as airports, hospitals, religious spaces, and city networks; exploring their distinct qualities of time and space.

Ackroyd & Harvey

Sculpture, photography, biology and ecology are some of the disciplines that intersect into their work, revealing an intrinsic bias towards process and event, often reflecting both architectural and scientific concerns.

Leo Fitzmaurice

His work is currently focused on the physical manifestations of information within our everyday environment. He reworks advertising, signage, packaging and print to reveal other, often surprising, aspects of the materials used within these various media which is so ubiquitous it is so often taken for granted.

Wolfgang Buttress

Working in a variety of materials including ferrous and non-ferrous metals, glass, concrete, stone and light, Wolfgang Buttress has, over the last 15 years, produced artworks for the public realm in the UK, USA, Europe and Japan.

Marie-Jeanne Hoffner

Marie-Jeanne Hoffner’s drawings, wall drawings and architectural installations reflect a perception of space as map, living space and place for the body. Her translation of space is both physical and metaphysical. On one hand, lines, plans and volumes propose a concrete experience of space, whereas on the other, semantic superimposition and fake perspective suggest an imaginary space that doubles our first apprehension of reality.

Ralph Hoyte

Bristol-based poet and text-based artist Ralph Hoyte created an exciting text-based work that captured and celebrated Bristol and the development of Cabot Circus. This major artwork, on the hoardings around the Quakers Friars area of the site, is one of the longest, site specific, text-based pieces in the country.

Blackout Arts

Art collective established in 2002 which evolved from Bristol’s inspirational art enclave The Cube Cinema and which focuses on creating audio, visual and mixed-mode art works.

Dan Perjovschi

He is now known for his graffiti-like drawings that cover the walls and floors of art galleries around the world. His style resembles the editorial cartoons that he produces for the newspaper, and the drawings often respond to divisions between the elite and the disadvantaged masses in Romania, the constantly shifting boundaries and nature of the European Union, and the movements of capital around the globe.

Lulu Quinn

Lulu Quinn & Julie Westerman

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