Katrina Blannin's solo show 'e x h i b i t i o n i s m' will be open to the public on Friday, March 31, 2017 at 6 pm at SALLE BLANCHE, Cologne. For more information, visit their website.
PIERS SECUNDA AT 532 GALLERY THOMAS JAECKEL
Piers Secunda’s solo exhibition ‘ISIS Bullet Hole Paintings’ will run between 6 April and 6 May 2017 at 532 Gallery Thomas Jaeckel, New York. Secunda’s ISIS Bullet Hole Paintings are the latest iteration of an ongoing project in which casts of bullet holes gathered from war-torn areas are arranged into compositions, recording the damage and threat that military combat poses to world history. For details of the show, click here.
JAMES BROOKS IN THE DRAWING BIENNIAL 2017
James Brooks' work 'Organisation of Peers, Commons and Gentry IV' is included in the Drawing Biennial 2017. The exhibition continues until 26 April at the Drawing Room, London, and works will be auctioned from 12 April 10am – 26 April 9pm. More information here.
WILLIAM STEIN IN 'FAITH'
William Stein will be exhibiting work in ‘FAITH’, a group show from The Slade School of Fine Art Graduate Painting programme, featuring current students, staff, research associates and visiting artists. ‘FAITH’ will run between 10 and 12 March at Austin Forum, Augustinian Centre, London W6 8AU, with a private view on Friday 10 March, 6-9 pm. More information here.
JESSICA CARLISLE IN LUXURY LONDON
Luxury London has published a digital version of Marylebone and Fitzrovia Magazine's interview with Jessica Carlisle about London's changing contemporary art market. Read the piece here.
MALENE HARTMANN RASMUSSEN IN 'MATERIAL: EARTH'
Malene Hartmann Rasmussen will be participating in ‘Material: Earth’, a major new exhibition celebrating the use of clay in contemporary art which will include work by Grayson Perry and Edmund de Waal. The exhibition will run between 12 March and 1 May at Messums Wiltshire. For more information, visit their website.
VERONICA SMIRNOFF IN ELEPHANT MAGAZINE
Elephant Magazine has featured 'Veronica Smirnoff: The Greater and Lesser Ways' at Jessica Carlisle in their Winter 2016 issue. You can read the piece here.
VERONICA SMIRNOFF IN ARTISTS & ILLUSTRATORS MAGAZINE
Artists & Illustrators Magazine has published a double-page feature on Veronica Smirnoff's practice. Pick up a copy of their April 2017 issue, or read the piece online here.
VERONICA SMIRNOFF IN COOLTURA
Cooltura: Polish Weekly Magazine has featured 'Veronica Smirnoff: The Greater and Lesser Ways' in their London arts picks. You can read the piece here.
VERONICA SMIRNOFF IN BECAUSE MAGAZINE
"The Russian-born, London-based artist takes traditional codes of art and transforms them into a new, beautiful sense of longing that feels absolutely relevant in today’s day and age."
Because Magazine has reviewed ‘Veronica Smirnoff: The Greater and Lesser Ways’. Read the article here.
VERONICA SMIRNOFF IN APOLLO MAGAZINE
Apollo Magazine has recommended 'Veronica Smirnoff: The Greater and Lesser Ways', including the show in their 'Around the Galleries' editorial in the February 2017 issue. You can read the piece here.
MARCELLE HANSELAAR ON ART IN FUSION TV
Rebeca Riofrio of Art in Fusion TV interviewed Marcelle Hanselaar at our London Art Fair 2017 booth, and the piece is now available to stream online. Watch Hanselaar talking about her pratcice and influences here.
VERONICA SMIRNOFF IN RUSSIAN ART AND CULTURE
Russian Art and Culture have previewed Veronica Smirnoff's solo exhibition 'The Greater and Lesser Ways' at Jessica Carlisle from 8 February - 4 March. Read the piece here.
JESSICA CARLISLE IN MARYLEBONE & FITZROVIA MAGAZINE
VERONICA SMIRNOFF IN TATLER
Pick up a copy of Tatler's March 2017 issue to see a preview of Veronica Smirnoff's work 'What Rocks Think Of' (above) in Josh Spero's 'Art for Sale' column. 'Veronica Smirnoff: The Greater and Lesser Ways' will run between 8 Feb and 4 March at Jessica Carlisle. Read the article here.
VERONICA SMIRNOFF IN HARPER'S BAZAAR
“That sense of mystery is palpable in Smirnoff’s latest body of work, on show at London’s Jessica Carlisle gallery next month. The choice of water as a unifying theme for the new pieces reflects the artist’s preoccupation with the ideas of displacement and metamorphosis. Her paintings are ‘fluid’, she explains, not only in their tendency to elude definition, but also because of the unpredictability inherent in their physical construction.”
Harper's Bazaar has published a feature on Veronica Smirnoff in the run-up to her solo exhibition 'The Greater and Lesser Ways' at Jessica Carlisle. The article is included in their February 2017 issue, or you can read online here.
VERONICA SMIRNOFF IN LOVE LONDON LOVE CULTURE
Love London Love Culture have published a preview of Veronica Smirnoff’s upcoming solo exhibition ‘The Greater and Lesser Ways’ at Jessica Carlisle. You can read the article here.
Malene Hartmann Rasmussen at Collect Open
Malene Hartmann Rasmussen's new installation 'Troldeskoven' will be exhibited at Collect Open 2017, a section of Collect dedicated to experimental craft and installation work by emerging artists. Collect is hosted by Crafts Council UK at Saatchi Gallery, London from 2 - 6 February 2017. Read more about Hartmann Rasmussen's work here, and find details about Collect 2017 here.
LONDON ART FAIR 2017
Jessica Carlisle is delighted to be showing works by Katrina Blannin, James Brooks, Claudia Carr, Paul Feiler, Marcelle Hanselaar, Clare Haward, Nadege Meriau, Overlap, Malene Hartmann Rasmussen, Nahem Shoa and Veronica Smirnoff at London Art Fair, Booth G3 from 18-22 January.
You can preview the works to be exhibited via our virtual booth on Artsy.
PIERS SECUNDA IN NEWSWEEK MIDDLE EAST
"“I had always wanted to make a record of the world around me, how we live. I think that making a record or a statement about the time that I am alive is the most significant thing I can do as an artist. This is when I started looking for ways to capture texture generated by geopolitics,” Secunda tells Newsweek Middle East."
Newsweek Middle East have published an in-depth article about Piers Secunda's bullet hole works, which document the impact left by bullets and shrapnel on archaeological monuments in Afghanistan and Iraq. Read the piece here.