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Since 2004 Edinburgh Art Festival has grown to be Scotland's largest annual visual arts festival, and comprising over 45 exhibitions across more than 30 venues. The festival has also commissioned or co-commissioned major artworks around the city by artists including Martin Creed , Callum Innes , Richard Wright and Susan Philipsz .
1 January – Seeing in the New Year: BBC Scotland's Hogmanay will be hosted by Amy Irons and Des Clarke and others, with most of the show pre-recorded. [1] STV's Bringing in the Bells will be hosted by Seán Batty, Laura Boyd, Jean Johansson, Grado and others. [2]
April 15 - "The Church" an arts center founded by the visual artists Eric Fischl and April Gornik opens in Sag Harbor, New York on the East End of Long Island. [6] May 5 - The first major art fair to take place in more than a year in New York City, Frieze, opens at The Shed at Hudson Yards. [7] [8] June
3 January – Public Health Scotland data released for the week ending 29 December shows the number of hospital admissions for flu has increased by 12% in a week, with influenza present in 52.6 per 100,000 people. [7] 6 January – A 2.9 magnitude earthquake is recorded in Kinloch, 19 miles north west of Oban. [8]
26 October 2024 until 9 February - Magritte at the Art Gallery of New South Wales [2] January 10 until March 16 - Nick Cave: Amalgams and Graphts at the Jack Shainman Gallery in New York City. [3] January 18 until June 1 - Gertrude Abercrombie: The Whole World is a Mystery at the Carnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. [4]
The Edinburgh International Festival is an annual arts festival in Edinburgh, Scotland, spread over the final three weeks in August. Notable figures from the international world of music (especially classical music) and the performing arts are invited to join the festival. Visual art exhibitions, talks and workshops are also hosted.
Visual Arts Scotland is a multi-disciplinary body that includes painters, textile artists, sculptors, ceramicists and photographers. It holds an annual exhibition at the Royal Scottish Academy building. [1] It is a registered charity (No. SC006715)
Collective was established in 1984 as the Artist's Collective Gallery [1] [2] and was located on Cockburn Street in Edinburgh until 2013, when it relocated to Calton Hill.It formed as a response to the artist-run 57 Gallery being absorbed into Fruitmarket Gallery: "Dissenting New 57 members... formed Collective on the basis of the original ’57 constitution", as academic Neil Mulholland has ...