"Industrial Aesthetics Environmental Influences on Recent Art from Scotland" Exhibition

Hunter College Art Galleries (205 Hudson St.)

This event has ended.

With Glasgow at its heart, Scotland has, over the past twenty-five years, developed into one of the world’s most influential and
imaginative centers of artistic production. New generations of artists continue to emerge from this unique city’s cultural
rebirth, and the country’s transformation into a vital creative nexus.

This exhibition brings together the work of an extraordinary group of artists from Scotland and contextualizes their various
aesthetic and conceptual concerns within the wider social and civic legacies of their environment.

While each artist has a purely individual approach, as a group they display the threads of a spiritual kinship, an elemental
sensibility that invokes aspects of Glasgow’s manufacturing and municipal history, as well as its cultural and fiscal renaissance. The work evinces a considered, material restraint coupled with a profound intellectual commitment. These common characteristics are deepened by a workmanlike intensity to the craft of art-making that lends gravitas and substance to the process as much as to the finished work, resulting in often exquisite and evocative realizations of urban or human experience.

One of the largest exhibitions of contemporary art from Scotland ever seen in the United States, Industrial Aesthetics:
Environmental Influences on Recent Art from Scotland presents a collection of works forged from a unique set of circumstances. The participating artists are the originators and caretakers of a dynamic and inventive art scene that echoes ideals of social organization and communal action—hallmarks of Glasgow’s political and commercial history.

Glasgow’s industrial base was once the reason for its status as the “Workshop of the Empire.” While today the empire is long
gone, the workshop remains. These artists are creative heirs to the city’s specific cultural and economic developments, and to
Scotland’s alternately illustrious, resilient, and ongoing evolution.

Industrial Aesthetics: Environmental Influences on Recent Art from Scotland is curated by Darren Jones (Hunter College MFA ’09) and is accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue that includes a foreword by Dr. Joachim Pissarro, Bershad Professor of Art History and Director of the Hunter College Art Galleries, critical essays by David Harding and Darren Jones, and an interview with Sam Ainsley. This exhibition is made possible with the support of the Hunter College Art Galleries Fund in collaboration with YoungArts, the core program of the National Foundation for Advancement in the Arts. Additional Funding provided by the Ruth Stanton Foundation, Madina Stepanchenko/Phenomena Project, The Foundation To-Life and an anonymous donor.

Media

  • Facebook

    Reviews

    All content on this site is © their respective owner(s).
    New York Art Beat (2008) - About - Contact - Privacy - Terms of Use