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The Fruitmarket Gallery is a contemporary art gallery in Edinburgh, Scotland. [1] Since its opening in 1974, the gallery has become part of the Scottish contemporary art scene. [2] [3] After a period of closure to undergo a significant renovation, the gallery reopened in 2021 with expanded exhibition space and facilities. [4]
In 2004, Coley exhibited at The Fruitmarket Gallery Coley, the artist constructed a series of scaled down, cardboard replicas of all of the religious buildings in Edinburgh. [10] In Lamp of Sacrifice , 286 miniature sites of worship are placed in direct confrontation with one another, exploring how religious buildings are characterised by ...
The Fruitmarket, Market Street, Edinburgh Screenshot, online Wikipedia Editathon 'A presence in history: Scottish artists of colour', January 2021, hosted by Tana Gambura and The Fruitmarket Gallery, Edinburgh “You feel so powerful, you can do all this stuff.” Workshop participant Welcome to the project page for the Fruitmarket.
Edinburgh: Scottish Flair Victorian Art Gallery [1] Inverness: Scottish Highlands: Scottish National Gallery: The Mound: Edinburgh: Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art: Edinburgh: Scottish National Portrait Gallery: Edinburgh Sharmanka Kinetic Gallery: Glasgow: St Mungo Museum of Religious Life and Art: Glasgow: Tramway (arts centre ...
As part of a planned renovation, the Fruitmarket Gallery commissioned a new public installation by Turner Prize winning artist Martin Creed to help improve the public perception of the steps. The installation, titled Work No. 1059, formed part of Creed's solo exhibition Down Over Up which was presented at the gallery in Summer 2010. [5]
The gallery was based at Rose Street from 1961 to 1974. [2] From 1974 it was based at 29 Market Street, occupying the upper floor (while Scottish Arts Council led Fruitmarket Gallery occupied the lower floor). Alexander Moffat was Chairman of the Gallery from 1968 until 1978. [3] Gareth Fisher followed him as Chairman. [4]
Briony Fer, Karla Black – Brains Are Really Everything, Scotland + Venice 2011, 4 June – 27 November 2011, The Fruitmarket Gallery, Edinburgh; Susanne Figner and Barry Schwabsky, Karla Black, Walther Konig, Koln, 2014. Kate Kraczon, Karla Black: Practically in Shadow, Institute of Contemporary Art, University of Pennsylvania, 2015.
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 ...