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Andrew Pepper

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Andy Pepper Administrator

Andy Pepper Administrator

Hi my name is Cong Keenan and I have been the Creative Director on Medunten Technology. The languages only differ in their grammar, their pronunciation and their most common words

Website URL: http://themesoul.com

Fragment Top Left (Red)

Tuesday, 01 January 2008 Published in Paper Be the first to comment!

Title: Fragment Top Left (Red)

Date: 2008

Edition: unlimited

Materials: 350gms/150lb medium cold press watercolour paper. 
Ph neutral, laser cut space.

Size: Of watercolour paper: 9 x 9 cm.
Framed size 16.5 x 16.5 x 4.5 cm

Production: Nottingham Trent University laser cutting studio, Nottingham.

Notes: A 'fragment' of a more complex piece, this unlimited 'sketch' gives a brief 'view' into the larger limited edition laser-cut on paper, Nine Drawn Spaces.

Fragment Top Left (Red)  is 'nestling' within private collections in the UK, USA, Germany, Sweden and Australia.

2009

Gallery 286, London, UK

Each year Gallery 286 brings together a number of the artists it represents plus guests for a celebration exhibition at the end of the year.

The Gallery 286 Christmas show has become something of a feature in the December calendar in the area.

Andrew Pepper showed along with:

Jennifer Abbott
Nicholas Barrow
Tim Dry
Bert Gilbert
Tanya Hooker
Natacha Ledwidge
Malgosia Levittoux
Charlotte Massip
Gaynor Perry
Martin Richardson
Jeffrey Robb
Andrew Ryder
Charles Sanderson
Camilla Shivarg
Rosetta Pierra Whitehead

With jewellery by Martick
and
Andrew Logan

Andrew Pepper showed "Top Left" a small laser-cut 'drawing'.


Exhibition dates: 8th - 31st December, 2009

Making Marks

Thursday, 04 September 2008 Published in Group Exhibitions Be the first to comment!

2008

Hand and Heart Gallery, Nottingham

A group exhibition, curated by Aaron Juneau, centered on the notion of "making marks" or 'mark making' in its broadest sense.

From the early Palaeolithic era and the very dawn of mankind, human beings have had an innate compulsion to externalise their thoughts and feelings, to pause and reflect on the past and present or prophetically envisage the future by way of creating images or simply producing visual or audible gestures.

A phenomenon that has continually diversified throughout history, from the first marks of humankind found deep within the Lascaux caves of Southern France to improvised music as a form of expressionistic sound drawing, ‘making marks’ has expanded to encompass every artistic medium and has been firmly established as a crucial provisional process in the formulation of all creative ventures. It might be said that much of an artists work goes unseen, becoming relegated to the recesses of the studio space. However, perhaps it is this unseen work that is pivotal to the constitution of all masterworks; an essential formative process, rooted in irresolution yet loaded with latent possibility.

The show encompasses many practicing visual artists including those within artist’s collectives in Nottingham and the surrounding areas with artist’s submissions from around the country. Work includes: textual, drawn, scrawled or scribbled, painted, photographed, filmed or videoed, recorded, spoken and performed.

'Over Drawn', reflection hologram on glass, on show at 'Making Marks'.

Photo © Keith Bryant 2008 


Exhibition dates: 4th - 21st September 2008 

2010

An Exhibition to celebrate the 60th anniversary of the hologram.

Exhibition Venues

The Willis Museum, Basingstoke, 3rd April - 22nd June 2010.

The Alton Museum, Hampshire, 4th July 4 – 29th August 2009.

The York College Gallery, 24th April 24 - 22nd May, 2009.

Buckinghamshire County Museum, Aylesbury, 6th December 2008 – 21st March 2009

Rugby Art Gallery and Museum, 7th - 31st August 2008

The Oxfordshire Museum, Woodstock, Oxfordshire, May - July 2008

Banbury Museum, Banbury, UK, 1st March - 5th May 2008 

BBC news report on the exhibition at Rugby Museum. (Opens in a new window)

The exhibition includes work by many of the formost hologram artists and other key innovators in the field - milestones from holographic history - along with some of the latest technical developments.

"In holography, our age is still the pioneering age, and the 1980's and 90's are the first age of holographic excellence. The artists who have chosen to work in the new medium are explorers that in later times will be accorded the same interest as Fox Talbot, Roger Fenton and Camille Silvy."

Chris Titterington. Former Assistant Curator of Photography, Victoria and Albert Museum.

The exhibition, devised by Jonathan Ross in association with curators from Banbury Museum and the Oxfordshire County Museum, has been mainly drawn from the Ross collection with support from various leading hologram makers. It comprises over 60 key works.


Square Eclipse, one of Andrew Pepper's early works from 1989, on show in Holograms, the First 60 Years.

 

 

2010- 2011

Arts Council England commissioned Axis to curate an exhibition on the first floor of its national office at Great Peter Street in London. Using the Axis website Arts Council England staff selected nine works which were installed in July 2010.

Axis aimed to reflect the diversity of work being produced around the country and selected 9 artists from their online arts directory.

Arts Council staff were asked to curate the exhibition by selecting artworks from each of the nine English regions. The selected was installed for 17 months at the Council's Great Peter Street London headquarters.

The piece selected by Axis and the Arts Council staff, from Andrew Pepper, was Cut Column, a laser-cut 'drawing' based on an earlier holographic monoprint, “Centre Column”, produced in 1989 and now held in the Lauk Collection, Germany.


Exhibition dates: 9th July 2010 - December 2011

 

About

Andrew Pepper works with projected light, holography and installation.  Based in the UK,  he has exhibited his work in group and solo exhibitions internationally and, as a senior lecturer in fine art at Nottingham Trent University, he taught on the BA (Hons) fine art course, the Master of Fine Art course and has acted as a PhD examiner for a wide range of key project-based research submissions.

 

This site is part archive, collecting text and images of work dating back to 1977, part centralised list for exhibitions and publications and part organisational tool to bring scattered information into one accessible location.  More >>

 

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Much of the content on the site has been collected into categories for easy access.  Key groups are listed to the left under QUICK LINKS but you can also search the entire site using work titles, event names or key phrases.