Work selected for Nottingham Castle Open Exhibition
Thursday, 20 October 2016 15:21 Published in NewsWork has been selected for inclusion in this year's Nottingham Castle Open Exhibition.
I will be showing a projected (drawn) 'intervention' onto one of the long gallery's Victorian radiators.
Each year Nottingham Castle Museum & Art Gallery holds it's 'Open' exhibition and invites artists in the East Midlands to submit work for inclusion. This year the selection panel was Amy Botfield, Arts Council England; Maeve Rendle, Artist and Alan Kane, Artist. From over 400 works they selected 37 artists that represented the wide range of creative practice taking place in the region.
The exhibition is open from 22 October 2016 - 8th January 2017 with a special reception taking place on 18th November.
More information here: www.nottinghamcastleopen.com
Title: Three - Nine
Date: 2016
Materials: 35mm slide + projector, gallery plinths, illuminated wall, digital reflection hologram,
Size: Gallery Installation
Notes: Developed from explorations initiated in the Summer Lodge 2015 residency at Nottingham Trent University.
29th June - 10th July 2015.
Subsequent staging and testing at Primary Studio's Film Free and Easy, October 2015.
Installed as part of the Alternative Document Exhibition, Project Space Plus, Lincoln, UK, the piece incorporates three 35mm slide projectors, each projecting a single image of a rectangle (and bisecting line) onto the gallery wall.
Other work with the 'three planes' digital hologram has been undertaken in a variety of locations.
The Alternative Document exhibition runs alongside an international symposium of the same name, which brings together artists working in performance and the documentation of events/activities/moments.
A new work, 'Three - Nine', by Andrew Pepper, has been included in the exhibition, at the University of Lincoln's Project Space Plus, and brings together recent experimentation and exploration around the unsupported mark, there-ness and the peripheral view.
More details about 'Three - Nine' available here.
Curated by Dr. Angela Bartram, the exhibition includes key works in photography, holography, video, text, performance, audio, sculpture, neon and projection.
Project Space Plus
University of Lincoln
Brayford Pool
Lincoln LN6 7TS, UK.
Participating artists:
Bartram O'Neill
Tim Etchells
David Brazier & Kelda Free
Hectgor Canonge
Rachel Cherry
Luce Choules
Emma Cocker & Clare Thornton
Kate Corder
Chris Green & Katheryn Owen
Louise K Wilson
Jordan McKenzie
Rochelle Haley
Exhibition dates: 12th February – 11th March, 2016
A new work by Andrew Pepper has been installed in the Alternative Document Exhibition, curated by Dr. Angela Bartram, along with an accompanying symposium at the university of Lincoln, UK.
'Three - Nine', 2016 is made up of three 35mm slide projectors (on gallery plinths) which illuminate the gallery wall and a centrally positioned digital hologram.
More details about the exhibition can be found here.
More details about 'Three - Nine' can be found here.
Installation view of The Alternative Document Exhibition showing video installation by Hector Canonge in the foreground and Andrew Pepper's installation, projecting onto the gallery wall ,in the background.
Title: Three Projected Levels
Date: 2015
Materials: Three 35mm slides, projectors & plinths
Size: 4 m wide (approx)
Installation: Gallery wall
Notes: Produced within the Summer Lodge 2015 residency at Nottingham Trent University.
29th June - 10th July 2015.
A row of 35mm Kodak Carousel slide projectors are located parallel to the gallery wall. Each contains a specially produced slide which is projected across the gallery onto the wall opposite.
The location, and structure, of the plinth which supports the 35mm slide projector is integral to the installation, offering a 'barrier' between the observer and the observed.
There are a series of questions raised around the nature of the illumination. Is the projector projecting the image, seen in the hologram, in a traditional manner? Where is the image located? Within the hologram, within the projector or some space between the two?