The Wilson Art Gallery and Museum Presents: Exhibition Into Abstraction

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The Wilson Art Gallery and Museum Presents: Exhibition Into Abstraction

The Wilson Art Gallery and Museum Presents:

Exhibition

Into Abstraction

5th October – 2nd February

 

The Wilson Art Gallery and Museum has formed an exciting partnership with The Hepworth Wakefield and Gallery Pangolin, to provide Into Abstraction exhibition works that explores the evolution of abstract art amidst the sweeping social changes of the twentieth century.

This ambitious programme will feature exhibitions and interactive artworks, events and activities designed to engage and inspire visitors of all ages.

At the heart of this programme is the touring collection: Into Abstraction, Modern British Art and the Landscape, curated by The Hepworth Wakefield. It showcases masterpieces by celebrated artists such as Barbara Hepworth, Henry Moore, Duncan Grant, and Ben Nicholson offering an in-depth look at how these artists interpreted and influenced abstract art in response to their environments.

Sculpture from Gallery Pangolin, represents their associated foundry’s important role in producing artwork by some of the most influential artists of the 20th Century. By constantly researching and developing both ancient and modern processes, renown artists from across the world flock to the Cotswolds to use their expertise and get an insight into the works cast in bronze, iron and precious metals.

Visitors to the exhibition can also explore bold and vibrant prints, along with striking canvases from The Wilson’s own collection, featuring works by notable artists like William Gear, Wilhelmina Barns-Graham, and Harold Cohen. These pieces exemplify the dynamic interplay between abstract art and the profound social and cultural shifts of the last century.

A new contemporary art commission from local textile artist Gemma Kay Waggett will invite audiences of all ages to engage with abstract art on a tactile and sensory level through material, colour and form, reflecting the local landscape with the focus on the archaeological site of Belas Knap, one of four Gloucestershire long barrows in the care of English Heritage and a fine example of the county’s Neolithic history.