The Wick List

Viewing Go Figure! 

Figurative art is seen through a contemporary new lens in this new group exhibition curated by Brad Keats. Each of the 11 featured international artists has reimagined the figurative style to explore their culture, heritage and pressing societal issues — many of which have historically been overlooked by the art world. The result is an intriguing and visually diverse exhibition that provides an exciting look at new names to watch.

A mix of painting, sculpture and textile pieces, the 30 featured works each adapt the figurative style to comment on or shed light on their own culture and the issues faced by their people. Highlights of the exhibition include Caroline Wong’s Caroline, Katharine, and Alisa, (2022) an exuberant colourful play on classical portraits that provides a fresh, contemporary perspective on East Asian women. Another striking work is Anne von Freyburg’s Trickster (After Fragonard, the Toilet of Venus) (2022), which sees the artist hand stitch fabrics over her paintings to comment on today’s consumerist society and the excesses of the fast fashion industry. In other works, such as the evocative pieces by Hanna Murray, Ivana Štulić and Wilba Simson, the subversion of figurative art is made through absences or anonymity, raising questions about the individuals who are ignored in current socio-political conversations.

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The Wick Culture - David Bowie, Debbie Doss, Hammersmith 1973. Courtesy of Lightroom
The Wick List

Viewing David Bowie: You're Not Alone

The Wick Culture - Viewing Go Figure! 
The Wick List

Viewing Collect Art Fair

The Wick Culture - Credit: Musée de la Vie Romantique
The Wick List

Viewing Museum of Romantic Life

The Wick Culture - Emilija Škarnulytė, Hypoxia, 2023 (detail), For All At Last Return, Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art, Gateshead. Photo: Colin Davison © 2025 Baltic
The Wick List

Viewing For All At Last Return

The Wick Culture - Wayne Thiebaud. Boston Cremes (1962) © Wayne Thiebaud. Courtesy of Crocker Art Museum
The Wick List

Viewing Wayne Thiebaud: American Still Life

The Wick Culture - Nan Goldin.
Mark in the red car, Lexington, Mass.
(1979) from “The Ballad of Sexual Dependency,” 
© Nan Goldin.
Courtesy of the artist and Gagosian
The Wick List

Viewing Richard Avedon: Facing West & Nan Goldin: The Ballad of Sexual Dependency