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Viewing The Fifth Edition of Contemporary Sculpture Fulmer
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Contemporary Sculpture Fulmer, Buckhinghamshire
15 May — 24 October 2021
Currently installed across the site’s beautiful gardens are sculptures by around 30 contemporary artists including Polly Morgan, Rosie Grace Ward and Robert Cervera.
The works on display form part of the fifth edition of Contemporary Sculpture Fulmer, an annual summer exhibition at this wonderful but little-known private sculpture park in Buckinghamshire.
Founded in 2017, Contemporary Sculpture Fulmer aims to offer artists a space for sculptural experimentation, development and dialogue. Which is why you’ll see works of varying shapes, styles and sizes nestled among the flora and fauna.
Highlights include Jamie Fitzpatrick’s Prince St Charming Jjjorge, an equestrian figurative work of St George crafted of broken forms and symbols; and Hannah Rowan’s delicate blown glass vessels hanging from a majestic old cork tree.
With so much on show, you’ll be hard pressed to find better al fresco viewing this summer. Just remember to pre-register online before setting off.
Viewing Julie Curtiss: Monads and Dyads, White Cube
Above Julie Curtiss, States of Mind, 2021
Above Julie Curtiss, Le Futur, 2021
Above Julie Curtiss, States of Mind, 2020
Above Julie Curtiss, Le Futur, 2021
Above Julie Curtiss, Kitchen Counter, 2020
Above Julie Curtiss, States of Mind, 2021
Above Julie Curtiss, Le Futur, 2021
Above Julie Curtiss, States of Mind, 2020
Above Julie Curtiss, Le Futur, 2021
Above Julie Curtiss, Kitchen Counter, 2020
White Cube Mason’s Yard
14 May — 26 June 2021
In recent years critics and collectors have feted Julie Curtiss, and commercial success has followed. Her quirky, saturated paintings of obscured or fragmented figures now sell for half a million dollars and can be found in private and public collections around the world.
Her first solo exhibition in London, featuring new paintings, works on paper and sculptures, draws you magnetically into the macabre, neo-surrealist vision that has made her name.
Curtiss has long been inspired by the notion of duality: ‘In my images, I enjoy the complementarity of humour and darkness, the uncanny and the mundane, grotesque shapes and vivid colours’. Not surprisingly, symmetries, binary oppositions and unexpected juxtapositions abound here.
States of Mind (2021), for example, depicts two middle-aged women wearing virtual reality headsets, while the carcasses in Coldroom 1 (2020) are polished and glossy, the environment clean and sterile. At once bizarre and dreamlike, Curtiss’s cinematic images get under your skin. No wonder she’s the art world’s new must-have darling.
Alma Zevi opened her first project space in the Swiss mountain village of Celerina in 2013. A gallery and project space in Venice and a show room in London soon followed. A champion of both emerging and established artists, the gallery hosts artist residencies, talks, private events and beautifully curated exhibitions.
Currently installed in London is Abracadabra!, a bijou group show curated by Freddie Powell. On show are works on paper by rising stars including Rebecca Ackroyd, Katy Stubbs and Tom Worsfold that explore the creative possibilities of magical thinking. Needless to say, you’ll be bewitched in no time.