Exhibitions and collaborations

‘The Artisan Collab at 45 Park Lane’

SEPTEMBER 5 - NOVEMBER 5 2023

The exhibition ‘The Artisan Collab at 45 Park Lane’ curated by Giovanna Ticciati will show the work of exceptional designers, makers and artists: beautifully made pieces from jewellery to sculpture and paintings. These seemingly disparate pieces celebrate the expression of something deep in us all they share, pieces imagined in solitude yet we all understand.

Comprised of ten international artisans, artists and designers, the exhibition shows the best in modern craftsmanship and technique through a variety of disciplines. 


This exhibition is part of 45 Park Lane’s art programme which is curated by @ackermanstudios, and brings together established and emerging international talent. 

@giovannaticciati
@ackermanstudios
@45ParkLane


The full line-up of the exhibition’s collaborators:

  1. Kate Boxer - artist @kate_e_boxer

  2. Pippa Small - jeweller @pippasmalljewellery

  3. Lucy Whitford - ceramic artist @lucywhitford.studio

  4. Bénédicte Vallet - ceramicist - none

  5. Benoît Averley - sculptor @benoitaverly_sculptor

  6. Gennaro Avallone - artist & designer @laboratoriogennaroavallone

  7. Bruce Rae - photographer - none 

  8. Noe Kuremoto - ceramic artist - @noe_kuremoto_ceramics

  9. Tom Palmer - artist, designer and maker @tom_palmerstudio

  10. Jessica Coates - ceramic artist


Procreate Project X Ellipsis Prints 2022

Procreate project is a pioneering arts organisation driven by an ethos that strives for innovation and sociocultural impact. Their aim is to support the professional development of contemporary artists who are also (m)others, working across disciplines.

EveryThing Must Go!

19 Jul

- 21 Jul 2019

Opening: Thursday 18 Jul, 6-10pm

EveryThing - is a collaborative artists' project that showcases a wide range of

multiple works for sale from collaborators past and present. Expect special

offers, curator tours, workshops and new artist editions.

Assembly Point is delighted to collaborate with Hart Club and Her Prints for

this iteration of EveryThing.

The third instalment - EveryThing Must Go! marks the official launch of the

new Assembly Point online shop project 'Editions:

New work from

Bea Bonafini, Bernice Nauta, Brian D Hodgson, Bora An-

derson, Christian Borchsenius Thomsen, Devlin Shea, Daniel Van Straalen,

Something Studios, May Hands, Milly Peck, Hannah Lees, Hannah Rowan, Lucy

Whitford, Phoebe Collings-James, Inês Neto dos Santos, Helena De Pulford,

Sam Meredith, Tony Lee, Tiago Mestre, Tanguy Bertocchi, Diyou yu, Robbie

Fife, Rebecca Kay, Rafal Zajko, Teal Griffin, Self Luminous Society, Aliyah Hus-

sai, Tiago Mestre, James Randell and many more...

Ellipsis Prints commission

Curator, creative producer and art writer, Kate Neave, commissioned me to produce two risographs for Ellipsis Prints. Ellipsis Prints commissions exclusive new limited edition risograph prints from the most talented contemporary women and non-binary artists in the UK. 

Ellipsis Prints supports women and non-binary artists by funding their training in printmaking and the production of their prints as well as encouraging the development of their careers through visibility, sales and support.

With lockdown limiting access to galleries, Ellipsis Prints is taking to the streets. Showing our prints at scale and outdoors gives them the attention they deserve. Womxn artists refuse to continue to be sidelined by the male dominated art world.

when: 14 August - 28 August 2020

where: Hackney Road at The Oval

artists: Gabriele Beveridge, Lydia Boehm, Bea Bonafini, Scarlett Bowman, Phoebe Collings-James, May Hands, Hannah Lees, Daisy Parris, Milly Peck, Hannah Rowan, Devlin Shea and Lucy Whitford

This exhibition is a collaboration with the BUILDHOLLYWOOD family of JACK.JACK ARTS and DIABOLICAL for their Your Space Or Mine project.

Freya Douglas-Morris, Nicholas Johnson, Lucy Whitford

7 – 24 January 2015 at Frameless Gallery, curated by Kate Neave.

“The long arc of trees hanging over the water seemed to drip and glitter with myriads of prisms, the trunks and branches sheathed by bars of yellow and carmine light that bled away across the surface of the water, as if the whole scene were being reproduced by some over-active technicolor process.”

—J.G. Ballard, The Crystal World, 1966

The exhibition A Crazed Flowering is inspired by the dystopian vision of J.G. Ballard’s The Crystal World in which a crystalline entity overwhelms a jungle environment transforming it into a dazzling, bejeweled mass. The characters of the novel are inexplicably drawn towards its dark and elaborate beauty, journeying further inside the crystalline forest and eventually yielding to its irresistible force. The apocalyptic phenomenon is a prismatic growth, an unstoppable menacing transformation with the capacity to suspend time as well as life.

A shimmering organic overabundance runs through all three of these artists’ work. Flower painting is an anachronistic genre, as far as the main events of the history of art are concerned. These artists grasp this historical model—associated with frivolous aesthetics and notions of decay—and draw out its contemporary relevance. Through their work the floral motif has become elusive and fragmented, associated with ominous visions of degeneration.

Freya Douglas-Morris’ painting hints at a distant paradisiacal terrain. With subtle abstractions and glowing colours, she alludes to alternate worlds in which nature plays a prominent part. With foliage and figures reduced to simple signifiers, these scenes are at once familiar and foreign. Rich allusive environments steeped in suggestion. Both imagination and memory feed into creating these evocative scenes. With her playful spin on time and space, Douglas- Morris blurs the line between memory and myth. Day seeps into night. Spiritual and material worlds intersect.

Nicholas Johnson pushes his botanical subject matter to a frenzied state. Layering abstracted motifs, lettering and found objects he creates a dizzying surface that immerses us in an unknowable forest of signs. There are unsettling hints of a more sinister side in his decorative style. A curious enchanting darkness lures us in. He creates a psychological space that entraps us. Motifs recur as though he cannot shake them off. With his inclusion of deteriorated digital prints, Johnson hints at the psychedelia of digital space and our immersive encounter with technology.

Lucy Whitford seeks out materials for their intrinsic properties, innate qualities and cultural histories. Weaving them together with her poetically conceived internal world to explore the way they resonate with lived experience. Her work hints at the profound subject matter of loss and longing, rooted in an internal narrative and mythology. Raw unfired clay appears to grow from the spaces between beams, cracks and joints of metal—fragile, organic forms tinged with a sense of defiance and dread, both beautiful and grotesque. Materials once familiar perch precariously on structures too exposed to afford safety, unearthing an intuitive exploration of the human experience that draws the viewer cautiously in.

Freya Douglas-Morris is a graduate of Royal Collage of Art (MA 2013). She was selected for theCatlin Art Prize 2014 and shortlisted for the East London Painting Prize 2014. Recent solo exhibitions include Studiolo #11 ‘One place or another’, Spazio Cabinet, Milan (2014), andWorkshop en La Pan, Stage La Pan Gallery, Barcelona (2011). Recent group exhibitions include100 Painters of Tomorrow, New York (2014), East London Painting Prize, Bow Arts (2014), Catlin Guide, Art London (2014), New Sensations 2013, Victoria House, London (2013), and Bloomberg New Contemporaries, ICA, London (2012).

Nicholas Johnson is a graduate of the Royal College of Art (MA 2014). He has been selected for the Catlin Guide 2015, was shortlisted for the Valerie Beston Prize 2014, the Chadwell Award 2014 and Saatchi’s New Sensations 2014. Recent group exhibitions include Saatchi’s New Sensations 2014, Victoria House (2014), Memory & Desire I. The Violet Hour, @ 37 Albermarle Street, London (2013), Lynn-Painter Stainers Prize Exhibition, The Mall Galleries, London (2013),Near that place…, Hockney Gallery, Jay Mews, London (2013) and Frozen Events, Flat Time House, London (2011).

Lucy Whitford is a graduate of Chelsea College of Art (MA 2012 with distinction). Recent solo exhibitions include Zabludowicz Invites: Lucy Whitford, Zabludowicz Collection, London (2013). Recent group exhibitions include Millington | Marriott, Poppositions, Dexia Art Centre, Brussels (2014), Slice, Hanmi Gallery, London (2013), Creekside Open selected by Paul Noble, A.P.T. Gallery, London (2013) and IN BANG SHOW OUT, The Pigeon Wing, Bermondsey, London (2012).


For more information and details of the works on display, please contact Kate.

A Crazed Flowering

Poppositions, Brussels

Poppositions
Dexia Art Center,
Brussels, BELGIUM
24 – 27 April 2014

http://millingtonmarriott.com/
http://www.poppositions.com/

I am pleased to announce my involvement in Millington | Marriott ‘s next offsite project.

Jennifer Bailey, Claire Baily, Rob Chavasse & Emily McCartan, Lucas Dillon,
Andrew Gillespie, May Hands, Lydia Hardwick, Russell Hill, Emily Iremonger,
Jack Lavender, Hannah Lees, Justine Melford-Colegate, Arnar Omarsson,
Berry Patten, Paul Schneider, Jackson Sprague, Isobel Mei Taylor,James Torble, Spencer Walton, Lucy Whitford

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