Berlin
June 2019
By Matt's Gallery on 6 June 2019
Upcoming Dean Kenning, Psychobotanical, Matt’s Gallery, London, private view 7 June 6-9pm, exhibition open Wed-Sun 12-6pm, 8-30 June 2019 For the 3x3x3 metre gallery space at 92 Webster Road, Kenning plans to extend and tumefy an on-going series of sculptural pieces, which feature throbbing plant-like protuberances. Encircling this motorised work the gallery’s walls will play […]
Posted in News | Tagged 3D printing, A length of spit dangled from a mouth., Aalst, Amberes, Anne Bean, Antwerp, Bad Mantra, Bad Mantras, Bath, Berlin, Botanical Drift, Broadside ballads, Cample Line, casting, catalogue, cityscapes, CNC, collaborative, Cornwall, cut up, David Austen, David Osbaldeston, Dean Kenning, diagrams, Dialogues with People, digital animation, Digital commission, Double Act, Dumfries, Dundee Contemporary Arts, Duveen Galleries. Duveen, Elizabeth Magill, England and Co. Gallery, Erkka Nissinen, Ghetto Priest, Graham Fagen, graphic, Hayley Newman, Helston, Hogarth and the Art of Noise, IG Metall, IKON Gallery, Imogen Stidqorthy, Jordan Baseman, Kestle Barton, LA, Luke McCreadie, M HKA, Matt's Gallery, Melanie Jackson, Michael Stanley, Mike Nelson, Mono, monoprint, monuments, MuKHA, Nathaniel Mellors, Netwerk Aalst, Nicola Bealing, performance, photography, plants, printmaking, Psychobotanical, publication, Radio Influenza, Roberto Bolano, sculpture, Simon Marsh, Tate Britain, Tate Britain Commission, text-based, The Aerodrome, The Asset Strippers, The Box, The Box LA, The Foundling Museum, The Holburne Museum, The Slave's Lament, Thornhill, Toine Horvers, welding, Wellcome, William Hogarth, writing
December 2017
By Matt's Gallery on 1 December 2017
Matt’s Gallery is moving to Ron Henocq Fine Art Matt’s Gallery is pleased to announce that in January 2018 it will move to Ron Henocq Fine Art, 92 Webster Road, Bermondsey, London, SE16 4DF. Located next door to Coleman Project Space and a few minutes walk from CGP London/Dilston Grove, 92 was home to the artists Roger Shaw and […]
Posted in News | Tagged ACME, ALEX, Alex Gartenfeld, Alexander and Bonin, Alexis Hunter, Andrea Zittel, Andy Warhol, Anna Oppermann, Atlantic Dialogue, Atlantic Project, Barbara Kruger, Berlin, Bermondsey, Bermondsey Artist Group, Berwick Visual Arts, Beth Forde, Bexhill On Sea, Bill Woodrow, Bruce Neuman, Burns Unbroke, Cafe Gallery, Carolee Schneemann, CASS Sculpture Foundation, Castrato, CGP London, Channels, Coleman Project Space, David Austen, De La Warr Pavilion, Dieter Roth, Dilstion Grove, Edinburgh, Eduardo Paolozzi, El Paso, Elaine Sturtevant, Esslingen, Everything at Once, Gabriel Hartley, Galerie Peter Kilchmann, Gean Moreno, Gerard Byrne, Glasgow, GoMA, Graham Fagen, Grundy Art Gallery, Hans-Peter Feldmann, Hito Steyerl, Home, Home (Waiting), Ian Hamilton Finlay, ICA, Imogen Stidworthy, Institute for Contemporary Art, Jane Evelyn Atwood, Jaroslaw Kozlowski, Joseph Mallord William Turner, Joyce Pensato, kennardphillips, Kiluanji Kia Henda, Legacies, Leo Kelly, Lindsay Seers, Lisson Gallery, Liu Chuang, MAAS, Marie Lund, Martin Kippenberger, Matt's Gallery, Mayflower 400, Melanie Jackson, Miami, Michael Curran, Mike Nelson, MONA, Mona Hatoum, Muirhead Bone, Museum of Applied Arts and Science, Museum Villa Merkel, New York, Nilbar Gures, Nine Elms, No Return, Pablo Picasso, Pennsylvania, Philip Guston, Phillip King, Polygraphs, possessions_inc, Queenstown, Richard Grayson, Rita McBride, Roger Shaw, Ron Henocq Fine Art, Rosemanrie Tockel, Roy Voss, Ryoji Ikeda, SAPLM, Sean Steadman, South Bank, Southwark Park, SPACE, Stanley Picker Traineeship, steel, Stephanie Seidel, Suffering, Summerhall, SUPERFLEX, Susan Hiller, Switzerland, Tasmania, Tesumi Kudo, The Drowned, The Everywhere Studio, The New Art Gallery Walsall, The Sleeping Procession, The Store Studios, The Unconformity, The Vinyl Factory, The Way Things Are, THIS IS A VOICE, Tom Trevor, tools that see (possessions of a thrif) - compressor, Ursula Biemann, Wang Shang, Webster Road, Wellcome Collection, West Sussex, Willie Doherty, Words and Colors, Yves Klein, ZAK | BRANKICA, Zurich | Leave a response