University for the Creative Arts

new dover road
CT1 3AN Canterbury, Kent
United Kingdom

sculpture network start'19 in University for the Creative Arts, Canterbury

Sculpt the world with us – You are cordially invited to start'19, the International Celebration of Contemporary Sculpture.

28th March at 2pm: Cragg lecture theatre
University for the Creative Arts
Canterbury Kent CT3 1NX

 

Introduction by Anthony Heywood

Keynote speaker; Andrea Gregson

Her talk will be talk interactive / social

Followed by a panel discussion


Security notice to all visitors: When visiting please leave time for signing in at reception.


Please note the reason we hold our European sculpture network annual START event during the taught week is to enable our students to attend.

 

Three-dimensional art and society

Andrea Gregson
Afterlife of Objects

The work of Andrea Gregson is an inquiry into among other things obsolescence, materiality, value and site.  With a long-standing interest in objects in series and taxonomies of display she focuses on the intertwining stories found in manufacturing processes and the history of sites. The sculptures attempt to create a new form of geology, representing a person’s movement through time. Using the casting process to transform and collapse matter, in ‘human time’ and reflect on the ‘deep time’ of geology she places the work within the context of the Anthropocene. Recent works are a series of metal castings and drawings from sites of material conflict such as Thames embankment where the contrast and collisions between industry and nature are clearly drawn.

Currently she is working on a new series for works for Grizedale forest with a show opening summer 2019.  The exhibition ‘Seeing Through The Ground’, will consider the landscape as a relic of past production, where natural materials are transformed through industrial processes. As part of Start 19, Andrea Gregson will present an interactive seminar whilst wrestling with questions of participation and her own making as a means of discovery and knowledge production.  

Gallery

Scroll to top of the page