Crash

1 MARCH – 30 MAY 2021

Curated by Stuart Semple

Ron Arad, Cory Arcangel, Paola Ciarska, Sarah Maple, The Artist Taxi Driver, Mark Titchner

  • Crushed Chairs, 1987

    Ron Arad (b. 1951).

    From Sticks and Stones exhibitions at Vitra Design Museum, Germany, 1987. 30 x 20 x 20 cm. Collection the Artist.

  • Crushed Chairs, 1987

    Ron Arad (b. 1951).

    From Sticks and Stones exhibitions at Vitra Design Museum, Germany, 1987. 30 x 20 x 20 cm. Collection the Artist.

  • Flat Mate, 1987

    Ron Arad (b. 1951).

    Metal, 150 x 75cm. Collection the Artist.

  • The World As We Know It, 2019.

    Sarah Maple (b. 1985) x SKIP Gallery.

    Wooden billboard, skip, vinyl, print. 325 x 223cm.

  • If I loved You it's Because Of Your Hair. Now That Your Are Without Hair, I Don't Love You Anymore, 2010

    Sarah Maple (b. 1985).

    Oil and Acrylic on Canvas. 190 x 170cm

  • Emily Ratajkowski, 2015

    Sarah Maple (b. 1985).

    Celebrities In Stone, Marble, 20 cm x 20cm.

  • James Corden, 2015

    Sarah Maple (b. 1985).

    Celebrities In Stone, Marble, 20 cm x 20cm.

  • Kim Kardashian, 2015

    Sarah Maple (b. 1985).

    Celebrities In Stone, Marble, 20 cm x 20cm.

  • Life and Pursuit of Pleasure #3 2020

    Paola Ciarska (b. 1993).

    Gouache on board, 12.5 x 12.5cm.

  • Untitled, 2021

    Artist Taxi Driver (b. 1964).

    Mixed installation, acrylic and watercolour on newspaper, artists frames, video, variable dimensions.

  • Untitled, 2021.

    Artist Taxi Driver (b. 1964).

    Mixed installation, acrylic and watercolour on newspaper, artists frames, video, variable dimensions.

  • Totally Fucked, 2003

    Cory Arcangel (b. 1978).

    A Modded NES ROM. Variable Installation.

Crash

1 MARCH – 30 MAY 2021

Curated by Stuart Semple

Ron Arad, Cory Arcangel,

Paola Ciarska, Sarah Maple,

The Artist Taxi Driver, Mark Titchner

 

“CRASH”, featuring work by artists including Ron Arad, Cory Arcangel, Paola Ciarska, Sarah Maple, Mark McGowan and Mark Titchner, centres around the “crash” that both society and culture have recently experienced.

Themes of technology run throughout. Our reliance on devices during lockdown for work or staying connected is reflected, as well as how easily a digital crash can disrupt day-to-day life. The exhibition is an opportunity to look back at the moment after impact – the crash experienced as a result of the pandemic.

This carefully curated exhibition opens up to a range of explorations, presenting different perspectives and different aspects of how the pandemic has affected our daily lives.