Here - Inside Artists magazine

Transcription

Here - Inside Artists magazine
Image fron issue 3 front cover
By Aitor Frías & Cecilia Jiménez, Time of Silence,
2015, digital photography, 51 x 76 cm
FEATURE GUIDE | Issue 7 WINTER 2016/17
behind the magazine: it allows artists to share space in the publication and
reach our database of art gallery curators and directors.
It’s a great way of capturing the attention of industry leaders; similar to
exhibiting your work at an art fair where the visitors are directors and curators
of the UK’s top galleries. It would be impossible to get all of these people in
one room for obvious reasons, so the magazine is a great way of showcasing
your work through the platform of a publication.
Inside Artists covers a broad spectrum of the art world.
• Exclusive interviews with artists.
• Curated profiles of talented emerging and established artists.
• Previews of upcoming events & exhibitions.
Mission Statement
About Us
I
nside Artists is a national contemporary arts and culture magazine,
showcasing talented emerging and established artists to industry
leaders and art lovers alike. Copies are sent out to over 600 of the
UKs top galleries and agencies, directly to curators and directors.
The magazine is also available to read for free online, targeting over
177,000+ readers worldwide each issue.
We’re the only magazine in the UK which distributes a free publication of
artist’s work directly to art industry leaders. We know from experience how
difficult and expensive it is to try to do this by yourself, which is the concept
We believe art to be one of the most important parts of humanity and culture.
It inspires, guides and challenges us, making people and society better and
happier. Art should be accessible for everyone, as well as the opportunity to
experience viewing work directly from the artist’s perspective.
Our publication encourages the contemporary arts by connecting artists,
galleries and exhibitions to industry leaders and art lovers alike.
Feature benefits
14 | ARTIST PROFILES | HELEN WELLS
HELEN WELLS | ARTIST PROFILES | 15
Here are just a few of the great benefits of featuring with Inside Artists.
Editorial feature
Your editorial will be seen by our 177,000+ targeted readers.
The Holiday, 2014, watercolour paint and ink pen
on watercolour paper, 41 x 31 cm
Upcoming event/exhibition listing
If you have any upcoming events/exhibitions we will list these in the
magazine.
Connected Planet, 2014, watercolour paint and ink
pen on watercolour paper, 41 x 31 cm
HELEN WELLS
B
ased overlooking the sea on the
South Coast of England, the water
is a constant presence and source
of inspiration for mixed media artist
Helen Wells, who takes elements from
nature and blends them into beautifully
intricate abstract works.
Combining mediums such as ink and watercolour
paint on paper, Wells works instinctively and
intuitively, finding rhythms in her process while she
paints. The repetitive flowing motion of her line and
mark making mirror the patterns in nature which often
act as a catalyst for new paintings; from the patterns
of the water left in sand, to textures on shells and
fossils, the structures of snowflakes and the marks on
feathers and wings.
Utilising the transparency of her medium to create
bright and clear other-worldly scenes, Wells builds
up layers of colour and pattern, each one revealing
elements of what lies underneath, before adding
complex details in paint or ink.
Wells’ artworks can be found in private collections
all over the world from America to New Zealand,
and having recently won Winsor and Newton’s
Watercolour Revolution competition, her work Still
Waters - a watercolour painting of an ornamental
pond in St Leonards on Sea - was exhibited in The
Saatchi Gallery, London.
Online listing
You’ll get an online listing on our website.
helenwellsartist.co.uk
[email protected]
Deep Water, 2014, watercolour paint and ink pen on watercolour paper, 41 x 31 cm
Helen Wells
"Being featured in Inside Artists magazine provided amazing
exposure to a spot-on audience. Appearing in the magazine led
directly to an exhibition in a celebrity chef's London restaurant. A
curator read it, got in touch and now I have 6 paintings in this world
famous chef's restaurant. Brilliant!
helenwellsartist.co.uk
Social media promotion
Support and promotion on Twitter and Facebook.
Printed copies
Featured artists will receive a printed copy of the publication (additional
copies available on request).
Targeted distribution
Copies of the magazine are sent to over 600 of the UK’s top galleries and
agencies; directly to curators and directors. Your work will be in the eyes
of some of the country’s most influential people working in the arts. The
magazine is also available to read digitally on our website for free via issuu.
Copies of the magazine are also sent out to our growing list of subscribers in
print and online.
Distribution
Inside Artists targets two markets; industry leaders and art lovers. Our readers
are cultured, affluent and well educated. They are curators, directors,
collectors, public relations and above all art lovers.
Online reads: 177,374
Based on our launch issue receiving 177,374 online reads within the first 3
months of publication.
Industry targeted distribution in print: 200+
Hard copies sent to over 200 of the U.Ks top galleries and agencies; directly
to exhibition and gallery curators, directors and agents. The magazine is
printed to the highest standards, perfect bound with premium paper and a
thick cover. It’s a magazine to hold onto, keep and collect.
Industry targeted digital distribution: 600+
Digital copies are sent to independent and national galleries and art agencies
across the UK. The digital copies are sent directly to exhibition and gallery
curators, directors and agents.
Subscribers: 4,100+
Our audience of art loving subscribers is growing every day.
Readership
Male: 44%
Female readers: 56%
Average household income: £96,283
Average age: 42
64 | INTERVIEW | RichaRd StaRbuck
RichaRd StaRbuck | INTERVIEW | 65
Editorial features
Whether you are a painter, sculptor, photographer or conceptual visual artist,
we love work of all different mediums and want to keep Inside Artists as
diverse, ground breaking and exciting as possible. The application process is
simple and further details can be found in this feature guide.
aN iNtERViEW With
RICHARD STARBUCK
S
lick black curtains of hair cascade across and around canvases in Richard Starbuck’s darkly
mesmerising mixed media works; hanging with sinister abnormity from household objects or
reimagined as strands physically etched into the black pigments of photographic images. While
reminiscent of visions of Japanese horror mythology and cinema, such as the cult classic Ring, it is
the ominous sense of the unknown that draws the viewer in to contemplate what may lurk beyond
the veil. based in London, the artist has exhibited regularly in the uk and uSa. We spoke to him
about his work and influences.
Although there are specific nods to visions of pop
culture horror in your work, you state that it is the
psychology of the uncanny that underpins your
work; what first drew you to this genre?
Since i was young i have always been into uFOs
and the paranormal, reading countless books and
listening to american radio shows dedicated to
the subject. i was so fascinated by the stories and
the storytellers behind them that it began to creep
into my work. uFOs and the paranormal has long
been associated with the uncanny, it’s mysterious,
Chaetophobia (Mercury Cleaners LTD Peckham), 2015, found wooden hanger and hair, 58 x 43 cm
strange and unattainable, this is what i like about it;
the ghostly nature of it. as my work has developed
i have gone on to explore an interest in the fear
66 | INTERVIEW | RichaRd StaRbuck
and anxiety that the uncanny causes, playing with
materials such as hair.
You speak of the hair in your works acting as a
sort of cloaking device for the viewer to imagine
what may or may not lurk behind; when creating
works do you consider a specific narrative for
each piece, or are even you unsure of what hides
behind the dark?
Even though my past works have been more
narrative driven i still feed off stories of the
supernatural, these latest works are even unknown
to me; i’m not sure i want to know what lurks behind
the dark. i’m much more interested in that space
RichaRd StaRbuck | INTERVIEW | 67
What does the cost cover?
The feature rates cover our time spent writing and producing your feature and
print, distribution and marketing costs of the publication.
Inside Artists is run by a very small team who come from art and design
backgrounds themselves. We know what it means to get your name out to a
wide audience at a low cost.
Application deadline
Applications for features close by the final closing dates listed below or
when spaces are full. As feature spaces are limited early applications are
recommended.
Phasmophobia 6, 2015, oil paint on wood, 20 x 15 cm
Case File M800.12, 2013,
oil paint on oil paper, 70 x 50 cm
Chaetophobia (Trouser Hanger), 2015,
wooden hanger and hair, 40 x 15 cm
between revealing what’s behind the curtain… that
moment before the terror. i’ve always found scary
Do you find you need to have an almost personal
detachment from your work to allow this unknown
What kind of reaction do you try to provoke from
the viewer?
movies are at their most chilling when you don’t see
the monster, but just a hint of a malevolent being
lurking round the corner or behind the curtain. there
to exist; to avoid shaping what should be seen
so the viewer is free to call upon their own
if they walk away mystified then i would be happy
with that. there are plenty of great artists who do
frightening imaginations?
art for everyone and it’s fantastic, but sometimes it’s
good to go somewhere quite, where the viewer can
meditate for a moment. the work has layers to it and
it’s a choice to peel it away or not, i just try to invoke
levels and layers that allude to a visible mask, with
is almost stillness in the air; entering a room with
a shadowy figure in the corner or a strange light
hovering above you in the night sky. it’s beautiful as
well as terrifying. One’s imagination is much more
frightening.
the hair is used as a veil but is itself also uncanny.
detached from the body it turns into something else,
something that is strange and uncomfortable to look
at, a thing that’s between living and dead. i wanted
to attach the hair to an object that was familiar, an
object that is found in the bedroom; morphing the
object into a more intrusive and sinister thing.
in a way, yes. i wouldn’t want to get myself bogged
down on what is exactly hidden, just the feeling of
something that is. i like the idea of an object that
is full of mystery, alien, off-world, something that
shouldn’t be there. the feeling i get with kubrick’s
obelisk in 2001: Space Odyssey; the blackness, the
simplicity of it, a seemingly inanimate object that has
some sort of intelligence. it’s so alien that it’s hard to
comprehend its purpose or nature.
Chaetophobia (Clown), 2015,
Hand crafted wooden hanger and hair, 50 x 30 cm
paint with vast emptiness around the marked areas. i
like the peacefulness of it.
What are you currently working on? Do you have
any upcoming exhibitions?
i’m currently working on larger hair objects, also
paintings of the objects themselves. this autumn i am
in a group exhibition at the cello Factory Gallery,
London, where i will be exhibiting one of my hair
points of entry that a viewer can explore if they wish.
objects.
It’s interesting how much volumes your pieces can
speak despite their apparent simplicity. Have you
richardstarbuck.com
[email protected]
always worked within such a minimalist aesthetic?
i guess i have always been that way, even in my ba
back in 2005 i was making paintings that where
minimalist and monochrome. Floating objects and
forms in an empty space, scratching tiny marks into
Issue 7 - Winter 2016
Early bird application deadline: 3 October 2016
Final application deadline: 1 November 2016
Feature options
Double page feature £199 (Early bird £149*)
Events & Exhibitions | Artist Profiles | Interviews
ISSUE 3 | 2015
This100 - 150 word editorial will focus on your work as an artist, detailing
artistic processes, inspirations and new works, and can include information
on previous or upcoming exhibitions. It will be accompanied by a selection
of 2 - 3 images of your work, your contact details plus an online listing on our
website and extensive social media promotion.
Four page feature £249 (Early bird £199*)
Allowing for more images of your work, this feature option includes an
editorial of 100 - 150 words about your artistic processes, inspirations and
information on upcoming or previous exhibitions, accompanied by a selection
of 4 - 5 images across four pages, your contact details plus an online listing
on our website and social media promotion across Twitter and Facebook.
Six page feature £299 (Early bird £249*)
Accompanied by a selection of 5 - 8 images of your work across a spread of
six pages, this larger 150 - 200 word editorial will have a real impact; giving
an insight into the processes behind your work. Includes your contact details,
plus an online listing on our website and extensive social media promotion
across Twitter and Facebook.
Eight page feature £349 (Early bird £299*)
Our biggest feature option combines an artist bio with a beautifully arranged
image spread across eight full pages. The 150 - 200 word editorial will
give readers an insight into the processes and inspirations behind your work,
accompanied by a selection of 7 - 10 images plus your contact details, an
online listing, plus extensive social media promotion across all platforms.
* Book by 3 October 2016
Industy distribution
Our distribution is HUGE and growing everyday. Over the next few pages you will see a list of galleries and agencies the magazine is sent to.
Printed copies
&Model, Leeds
Aberystwyth Arts Centre, Aberystwyth
Alan Cristea Gallery, London
Andor Gallery, London
Antlers Gallery, Bristol
Arnolfini, Bristol
Art Fair East, Norwich
Artangel, London
Arusha Gallery, Edinburgh
Atlas Gallery, London
Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art, Gateshead
Bankside Gallery, London
Barbican Art Gallery, London
Bartha Contemporary, London
Bath Contemporary, Bath
Beaux Arts, London
Beers Contemporary, London
Borde Hill Sculpture exhibition, West Sussex
Camden Arts Centre, London
Candida Stevens Fine Art, Chichester
Cass Art, London
Castle Galleries, Birmingham
CCA, Glasgow
Centre for Contemporary Art, Glasgow
Charlie Smith, London
Coates and Scarry, Bristol
Cornerhouse, Manchester
Cube Gallery, Bristol
DARREN BAKER GALLERY, London
David Zwirner, London
De La Warr Pavilion, Bexhill on Sea
Doubt Fire Gallery, Edinburgh
Dovecot Studios, Edinburgh
Landmark Arts Centre, Teddington
Pace gallery, London
Drawing Room, London
Leeds Art Gallery, Leeds
Pallant House Gallery, Chichester
Drawn to the Valley, Devon
Lisson Gallery, London
Parker Harris
Edgar Modern, Bath
London Art Fair, London
Paul Stolper, London
FACT, Liverpool
Mac Arts, Birmingham
Pelham Communications, London
Ffotogallery, Penarth
Made North, Sheffield
Raven Row, London
Fidra Fine Art, East Lothian
Manchester Art Gallery, Manchester
RBSA, Birmingham
FineArtSeen, Oxford
Manchester Contempory, Manchester
Robilant + Voena, London
Firstsite, Colchester
Massimo De Carlo, London
Royal Academy of Arts, London
Focal Point Gallery, Southend-on-Sea
Maureen Paley, London
Rugby Art Gallery & Museum, Rugby
Fold Gallery, London
Menier Gallery, London
S1 Artspace, Sheffield
G39, Cardiff
Metal Culture, Liverpool
Saatchi Gallery (Press Office), London
Gagosian Gallery, London
Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art,
Sainsbury centre for Visual Art, Norwich
Gallery of Modern Art, Glasgow
Middlesborough
Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art Press
Gallery Ten, Cardiff
Mission Gallery, Swansea
Office, Edinburgh
Gazelli Art House, London
Moatti, London
Serpentine Gallery
GoMa, Glasgow
Modern Art Oxford, Oxford
Site Gallery, Sheffield
Halcyon Gallery, London
National Museum Wales, Cardiff
Situations, Bristol
Harris Museum and Art Gallery, Preston
New Art Exchange, Nottingham
South London Gallery, London
Harrogate International Visual Arts EXPO
New Artist Fair, London
Spike Island, Bristol
Hauser & Wirth, London
New Contemporaries, London
Stills Centre for Photography, Edinburgh
Hayward Gallery, London
Norwich Arts Centre, Norwich
Tate Liverpool Press Office, Liverpool
Henry Moore Institute, Leeds
Norwich Contemporary Art Society, Norwich
Tate Liverpool, Liverpool
Here Gallery, Bristol
Norwich Museums Service, Norwich
Tate Modern, London
Home, Manchester
Norwich Studio Art Gallery, Norwich
The Art House, Wakefield
ICA, London
Nottingham Contemporary Press Office,
The Barber Institute, Birmingham
Ikon gallery, Birmingham
Nottingham
The Biscuit Factory, Newcastle
Impressions Gallery, Leeds
Nottingham Contemporary, Nottingham
The Bramfield Gallery, London
ink_d (curative director), Brighton
Off The Wall, Cardiff
The Corridor Gallery, Brighton
Jerwood Gallery, Hastings
Open Eye Gallery, Edinburgh
The Fruitmarket Gallery, Edinburgh
Jerwood Space, London
Open Eye Gallery, Liverpool
The Henry Moore Foundation, Herts
Josh Lilley Gallery, London
Osborne Samuel, London
The Hepworth Wakefield, Wakefield
La Galleria Pall Mall, London
Outside In, Chichester
The Holburne Museum, Bath
The Lowry, Manchester
Friction Arts, Birmingham
Spike Island, Bristol
Rhubaba Gallery, Edinburgh
The National Open Art Competition, West
Grand Union, Birmingham
Spike Print Studio, Bristol
Scottish National Gallery, Edinburgh
Sussex
Ort gallery, Birmingham
The Grant Bradley Gallery, Bristol
Stills Centre for Photography, Edinburgh
The Photographer’s Gallery, London
Solihull Arts Complex, Birmingham
The Guildhall, Bristol
Summerhall, Edinburgh
The Sutton Gallery, Edinburgh
Stryx, Birmingham
The Island, Bristol
Talbot Rice Gallery, Edinburgh
The Tetley, Leeds
The Barber Institute, Birmingham
The Searchers Contemporary, Bristol
The Fruitmarket Gallery, Edinburgh
The Whitworth Art Gallery, Manchester
The Drum, Birmingham
Upfest, Bristol
The Queen’s Gallery, Edinburgh
Towner Gallery, Eastbourne
The Lombard Method, Birmingham
View, Bristol
Whitespace, Edinburgh
Tramway, Glasgow
Transient Art, Birmingham
Watershed, Bristol
Collective Gallery, Edinburgh
Turner Contemporary (Press Office), Kent
Werk, Birmingham
Weapon of Choice, Bristol
The Saffron Walden Gallery, Essex
Turner Contemporary, Kent
Art 5 Gallery, Brighton
Great Dome Art Fair, Buxton
CCA, Glasgow
Untitled Gallery, Manchester
Brighton Art Fair, Brighton
Cambridge Art Fair, Cambridge
Compass Gallery, Glasgow
Victoria and Albert Museum, London
Cloud Gallery, Brighton
Wysing Arts Center, Cambridge
David Dale Gallery, Glasgow
Victoria Miro
Crane Kalman, Brighton
Boundary Art, Cardiff
Gallery of Modern Art, Glasgow
View Art Gallery, Bristol
Fabrica, Brighton
Chapter, Cardiff
Glasgow School of Art, Glasgow
Vilma Gold, London
ink_d gallery, Brighton
G39, Cardiff
Glasgow Sculpture Studios, Glasgow
Vivd Projects, Birmingham
iO Gallery, Brighton
Martin Tinney Gallery, Cardiff
Good Press Gallery, Glasgow
Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool
Jag Gallery, Brighton
Off The Wall, Cardiff
House for an Art Lover, Glasgow
White Cube Galleries, London
No walls, Brighton
Oriel Myrddin Gallery, Carmarthen
Hunterian Art Gallery, Glasgow
White Cube Galleries, London
Onca, Brighton
Oriel Myrddin Gallery, Carmarthen
Market Gallery, Glasgow
Whitechapel Gallery, London
One Eyed Jacks, Brighton
Turner Barnes Gallery
Mary Mary, Glasgow
Wildlife Artist of the Year
Phoenix, Brighton
The Gardens Gallery, Cheltenham
Picture Window, Glasgow
Wilkinson Gallery, London
Sallis Benney Theatre and Gallery, Brighton
Oxmarket Centre of Arts, Chichester
Streetlevel Photoworks, Glasgow
Workplace London, London
Taylor Made Gallery. Brighton
Cornwall Design Fair, Cornwall
SwG3, Glasgow
Yorkshire Sculpture Park, Wakefield
Unlimited, Brighton
The Herbert, Coventry
The Common Guild, Glasgow
Affordable Art Fair, Bristol
Buxton Spa Prize, Derbyshire
The Glue Factory, Glasgow
Antlers Gallery, Bristol
Sladers Yard, Dorset
The Lighthouse, Glasgow
Aberdeen Art Fair, Aberdeen
Arnolfini, Bristol
Black Cube Collective, Edinburgh
Tramway, Glasgow
Aberdeen Art Gallery & Museum, Aberdeen
Bristol Contemporary Art, Bristol
Bourne Fine Arts, Edinburgh
Transmission Gallery, Glasgow
Aberystwyth Arts Centre, Aberystwyth
Bristol Folk House, Bristol
City Art Centre, Edinburgh
The Telfer Gallery, Glasgow
Adam Gallery, Bath
Bristol Museum & Art Gallery, Bristol
Dovecot Studios, Edinburgh
Harrogate International Visual Arts EXPO,
Edgar Modern, Bath
Centrespace, Bristol
Edinburgh Art Fair, Edinburgh
Harrogate
The Holburne Museum, Bath
Christmas Steps Gallery, Bristol
Edinburgh College of Art, Edinburgh
Hartlepool Festival of Illustration, Hartlepool
A3 Project Space, Birmingham
Coates and Scarry, Bristol
Embassy Gallery, Edinburgh
Cameron Contemporary Art, Hove
Article Gallery, Birmingham
Courtyard Gallery, Bristol
Gallery TEN, Edinburgh
The Naked Eye Gallery, Hove
Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery,
Cube Gallery, Bristol
Hidden Lane Gallery, Edinburgh
Vortigern Margate, Kent
Birmingham
Fig, Bristol
Ingleby Gallery, Edinburgh
Castle Gallery, Leeds
Birmingham Printmakers, Birmingham
Its All 2 Much, Bristol
Interview Room 11, Edinburgh
Craft Centre, Leeds
Eastside Projects, Birmingham
Jamaica Street Artists, Bristol
Inverleith House, Edinburgh
East St. Arts, Leeds
Fierce Festival, Birmingham
Royal West Academy, Bristol
Jupiter Artland, Edinburgh
Henry Moore Institute, Leeds
Digital copies
Hester Gallery, Leeds
Art Lucana, London
Christine Park Gallery, London
Handel Street Projects, London
Project Space Leeds, Leeds
Art on the Underground, London
Clifford Chance, London
Hanmi Gallery, London
The Stanley & Audrey Burton Gallery, Leeds
Art Space Gallery
Collyer Bristow Gallery, London
Hay Hill Gallery, London
The Tetley, Leeds
Artangel, London
Corvi-Mora, London
Hayward Gallery, London
Whitecloth Gallery, Leeds
ASC Studios, London
Cricket Fine Art, London
Herald St., London
Arts hub 47, Liverpool
Austin Desmond Fine Art, London
Cubitt Gallery, London
Hollybush Gardens, London
cactus Gallery, Liverpool
Barbican Art Gallery, London
Cul de Sac Gallery, London
Hoxton Arches, London
Corke Art Gallery, Liverpool
Bartha Contemporary, London
Curious Duke Gallery, London
Hus Gallery, London
Dot-Art, Liverpool
Beaconsfield , London
Dairy Art Centre, London
Ibid, London
Editions Gallery, Liverpool
Bearspace, London
dala Rosa, London
ICA, London
FACT, Liverpool
Beaux Arts, London
Dalla Rosa Gallery, London
Iniva, Rivington Place, London
Fallout Factory, Liverpool
Belmacz, London
Daniel Blau, London
Jack Bell Gallery, London
Liverpool Biennial, Liverpool
Ben Brown Fine Arts, London
Danielle Arnaud Contemporary, London
Jaggedart, London
Liverpool Contemporary Art Fair, Liverpool
Berloni, London
DARREN BAKER GALLERY, London
Jerwood Space, London
Liverpool Contemporary Arts Fair, Liverpool
Bernard Jacobson Gallery, London
David Zwirner, London
John Jones Project Space, London
Model, Liverpool
Betts Project, London
Delfina Foundation, London
John Martin of London, London
Open Eye Gallery, Liverpool
Blaine Southern, London
Domo Baal, London
Jonathon Viner, London
Staacks, Liverpool
Bloomberg New Contemporaries, London
Dulwich Picture Gallery, London
Josh Lilley Gallery, London
Tate Liverpool, Liverpool
Blyth Gallery, London
Enclave, London
Kashya Hildebrand, London
The Bluecoat, Liverpool
Breed, London
England & Co, London
Kate MacGarry, London
The Cornerstone Gallery , Liverpool
British Art Fair, London
EOA. Projects, London
Kemistry Gallery, London
The Royal Standard, Liverpool
Browse & Darby, London
Erarta Galleries London, London
Kinetica Art Fair, London
Mostyn, Llandudno
C&C Gallery, London
Faggionato, London
Kingsgate Gallery, London
David Zwirner, London
Calvert 22 Gallery, London
Flat Time House, London
Kristin Hjellegjerde Gallery, London
A.P.T, London
Camberwell Space, London
Fleming Collection, London
Kunstraum, London
Acme Project Space, London
camden Arts Centre, London
Flowers Gallery, London
La Galleria Pall Mall, London
Afterall, London
Campbell Works, London
Fold Gallery, London
Landmark Arts Fair, London
Alan Cristea Gallery
Campoli Presti, London
French Riviera, London
Large Glass, London
Albemarle Gallery, London
Canal, London
Frith Street Gallery, London
Laura Bartlett Gallery, London
Alison Jacques Gallery, London
Canary Wharf, London
Gallery S O, London
Laure Genillard, London
Almine Rech gallery, London
Carl Freedman Gallery, London
Gasworks, London
Leontia Gallery, London
Alon Zakaim Fine Art, London
Carl Kostyal , London
Gazelli Art House, London
Lewisham Arthouse, London
Ancient & Modern, London
Carlos/Ishikawa, London
Gimpel Fils, London
Leyden Gallery, London
Anise Gallery, London
Cecilia Brunson Projects, London
Greengrassi, London
Limoncello, London
Annely Juda Fine Art, London
Cell Project Space, London
Grimaldi Gavin Gallery, London
London Design Festival, London
Anthony Outred, London
CGP London Café Gallery, London
GV Art Gallery, London
London Gallery West, London
Anthony Reynolds, London
Charlie Smith London, London
Hada Contemporary London, London
London Print Studio Gallery, London
Arcade, London
Chelsea Space, London
Halcyon Gallery, London
Lubomirov Easton, London
Architectural assosiation, London
Chisenhale Gallery, London
Hales Gallery, London
Luxembourg & Dayan, London
Art First, London
Chris Beetles Gallery, London
Hamiltons Gallery, London
Maddox Arts, London
Mall Galleries, London
Redfern Gallery, London
The Cult House, London
Artzu Gallery, Manchester
Maria Stenfors, London
Richard Saltoun, London
The Cynthia Corbett Gallery, London
Bureau Gallery, Manchester
Marian Goodman Gallery, London
Robilant & Voena, London
The Eagle Gallery, London
Castlefield Gallery, Manchester
Marlborough Contemporary, London
Robilant + Voena, London
The Foundry Gallery, London
Centre for Contemporary Chinese Art,
Marlborough Fine Art, London
Rocket, London
The Mayor Gallery, London
Manchester
Massimo De Carlo, London
Rod Barton, London
The Other Fair, London
Contemporary Six, Manchester
Massimo de Carlo, London
Rollo, London
The Pace Gallery, London
Cornerhouse, Manchester
Matt’s Gallery, London
Roman Road, London
The Photographers’ Gallery, London
Gallery Oldham, Manchester
Max Wigram Gallert, London
Rose Issa Projects, London
The Photographer’s Gallery, London
Home, Manchester
Mazzoleni Gallery, London
Rosefield Porcini, London
The Showroom, London
Manchester Art Gallery, Manchester
Menier Gallery, London
Rossi & Rossi, London
The Sunday Painted, London
Manchester Contempory, Manchester
Michael Werner Gallery, London
Royal Academy of Arts, London
The Wrapping Project, London
Manchester Craft and Design Centre,
Moatti, London
Sarah Myerscough, London
Thomas Dane Gallery, London
Manchester
Modern Art London, London
Schwartz Gallery, London
Timothy Taylor Gallery, London
Salford Museum and Art Gallery, Manchester
Moniker Art Fair, London
Scream, London
Tintype Gallery, London
The Manchester Contemporary, Manchester
Morley Gallery, London
Selma Feriani Gallery, London
Tiwani Contemporary, London
Whitworth Art Gallery, Manchester
MOTinternational, London
Serpentine Galleries, London
TJ Boulting, London
Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art,
Mummery & Schnelle, London
Simon Lee, London
Treehouse Gallery, London
Middlesborough
New Artist Fair, London
Sims Reed Gallery, London
Union Gallery, London
Harrogate Internation Visual Arts Expo
Noshowspace, London
Skarstedt, London
Untitled Artists Fair, London
Art 18|21, Norwich
October Gallery, London
Slate projects, London
Victoria and Albert Museum, London
Art Fair East, Norwich
Olympia Internation Art Fair, London
Southard Reid, London
Vitrine Gallery, London
Castle Gallery, Norwich
Osbourne Samuel, London
Space Station Sixty-five, London
Waddington Custot Gallery, London
Grapevine Gallery, norwich
PAD London, London
Space, London
Waterhouse & Dodd, London
mandell’s Gallery, Norwich
Pangolin Gallery, London
Spreuth Magers London, London
Waterside Contemporary, London
Norwich Castle Museum & Gallery, Norwich
Parasol Unit, London
Sprovieri, London
White Cube Galleries, London
Norwich Outpost, Norwich
Parralax, London
Stair Saintly, London
White Rainbow, London
Norwich University of the Arts Gallery, Norwich
Patrick Heide Contemporary, London
Standpoint, London
Whitechapel Gallery, London
Sainsbury Centre for Visual Art, Norwich
Payne Shurvell, London
Stanley Picker Gallery, London
Wilkinson Gallery, London
St. Giles St. Gallery, Norwich
Peckham Platform, London
Start Art Fair, London
William Weston, London
The Assembly House, Norwich
Peer, London
Stephen Friedman, London
Wimbledon Space, London
Castle Gallery, Nottingham
Pi Artworks, London
Studio 1.1, London
Work Gallery, London
Couture Nottingham, Nottingham
Pilar Corrias, London
Studio Voltaire, London
Workplace London, London
Focus Gallery, Nottingham
Piper Keys, London
Supplement, London
World Photography Organisation, London
New Art Exchange, Nottingham
Pippy Houldsworth Gallery, London
Tenderpixel, London
WW Gallery, London
Nottingham Contemporary, Nottingham
Pitzhanger Manor House & Gallery, London
The Approach, London
Zabludowicz Collection, London
Primary, Nottingham
Portland Gallery, London
The Artists Agency, London
Beetles & Huxley, London
Syson Gallery, Nottingham
Project Native Informant, London
The Bramfield Gallery
London Art Weekend, London
The Crocus Gallery, Nottingham
Purdy Hicks Gallery, London
The Brick Lane Gallery, London
The Little Black Gallery, London
Trade Gallery, Nottingham
Rebecca Hossack Art Gallery, London
The Chocolate Factory N16, London
Ludlow Castle Gallery, Ludlow
Aiden Meller Galleries, Oxford
Art at Goring, Oxford
Cornerstone, Oxford
Hemingway Art, Oxford
Modern Art Oxford, Oxford
o3 Gallery, Oxford
Oxford Art Fair, Oxford
oxford Ceramics Gallery, Oxford
Sarah Wiseman Gallery, Oxford
The Old Fire Station, Oxford
Waterperry Gardens, Oxford
Ashmolean Museum, Oxford
Plymouth Arts Centre, Plymouth
Harris Museum and Art Gallery, Preston
99 Mary Street, Sheffield
Bloc projects, Sheffield
Museums Sheffield, Sheffield
Thompson’s Gallery, Aldeburgh
Elysium Gallery, Swansea
Castle Galleries, UK
The Hepworth Wakefield, Wakefield
Yorkshire Sculpture Park, Wakefield
Cross Street Arts, Wigan
The Firestation, Windsor
Windsor Contempory Art Fair, Windsor
Bevere Art Gallery, Worcester
Brimstone Gallery & Gifts, Worcester
Damon Hall Art Studio, Worcester
Division of Labour, Worcester
Little Buckland Gallery, Worcester
The Paintbox Gallery, Worcester
Worcester City Museum & Art Gallery,
Worcester
Little Buckland Gallery, Worcestershire
Bils & Rye, York
York Festival of Ideas, York
Quercus Gallery, Bath
Release schedule
The team
Inside Artists was created in 2014 by editors Kieran Austin and Toby Oliver
Dean. Kieran has worked in design, publishing, marketing and the arts for
several years, working for a broad range of clients from music agencies to
art galleries. Toby is the main feature writer for Inside Artists. Having studied
Fine Art at university, Toby has exhibited as an artist across the UK, and
continues to make new work alongside working on the magazine. Together
our experience in media, the arts and publishing has driven our passion to
find and showcase the talented artists.
Issue
Release
Spring 2016
Issue 4 - Mar/Apr/May
1 Mar
Summer 2016
Issue 5 - June/July/Aug
1 June
Autumn 2016
Issue 5 - Sept/Oct/Nov
1 Sept
Get in touch
Winter 2016/17
Issue 6 - Dec/Jan/Feb
1 Dec
Editors: Kieran Austin & Toby Oliver Dean
Application process
To apply to feature in our next issue visit the feature your work section of our
website and apply online: insideartists.co.uk
We will review all applications within 3 days of submission and successful
applicants will be contacted shortly after to begin creating your feature. You
will be prompted to make payment after submitting your application; if you
are not successful on this occasion you will receive a full refund after review.
Phone: +44 (0)1273 748 630
Email: [email protected]
Website: insideartists.co.uk
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Inside Artists, 35 Holland Mews, Hove, East Sussex, BN3 1JG