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Photobooth images of Liz Rideal against a pink background
Think Pink, Liz Rideal

Slade lecturer Prof. Liz Rideal and alumnae Chila Kumari Singh Burman, Judy Clark, Catherine Elwes, Bhajan Hunjan, Zarina Bhimji, Sutapa Biswas, Mona Hatoum and Anne Tallentire are showing in Women in Revolt! Art and Activism in the UK 1970–1990, 8 November 2023–7 April 2024, at Tate Britain, Millbank, London SW1P 4RG.

Women in Revolt! Is a landmark exhibition of feminist art in the UK from 1970 to 1990. It will explore how interconnected networks of women used radical ideas and rebellious methods to make an invaluable contribution to British culture. Showcasing work by over 100 women artists and collectives living and working in the UK, this will be the first major survey of its kind.

Spineless Wonders of Wales is hybrid event takes place at Y Drwm, NLW/LLGC, Aberystwyth and online, Friday 17 November, 10.00am - 5.30pm.

Spineless Wonders is an international network of artists, writers, academics and librarians, creating and researching small press publications including artists books.

Presenting small press material by small publishers in Wales at NLW/LLGC we will be joined online by presentations of material in the Welsh language from library collections at University College London, UCL and The Institute of Historical Research, School of Advanced Study, University of London.

The aim of the day is to focus attention on these small press collections with poetry readings, film and visual art presentations, discussion panels, and a creative workshop.

FREE, register:

Woburn Square Refurbishment
Woburn Square Refurbishment, 2023

Photo credit: Fred. © Haworth Tompkins

Haworth Tompkins have worked with University College London (UCL), University of London (UoL) and the UCL Slade School of Fine Art to deliver the refurbishment of eight top-lit painting studios in the Bloomsbury area of London. Designed in the 1950s by Charles Holden as gallery spaces for the Courtauld Institute, the studios sit on the top floor of the Warburg Institute building but are accessed by a dedicated entrance and stairwell.  

A glazed roof and laylight ceiling provide filtered natural light, creating ideal conditions for painting and sculpture, while retaining maximum available wall space for display. 

The spaces have been called ‘home’ by generations of students at the Slade. Haworth Tompkins have refined and refreshed the interiors with respect for the integrity of the original design. New heating, lighting and ventilation systems are carefully incorporated to improve the studio’s energy efficiency and user comfort to contemporary building standards.

These sensitive refinements give the studios a new lease of life, providing refreshed creative spaces for generations of students to come. 

Portrait photograph of Mary Evans
Mary Evans, May 2023

Photo credit: Christa Holka

We are delighted to welcome Mary Evans as new Slade Director, who started on 4 October. To get to know her better, we asked her five questions:

  1. Tell us a little bit about yourself and your practice?
    My research interrogates the social and political frameworks of Diaspora. I work mainly on large scale site and research responsive installations. My main medium is paper which I use because it is both fragile and resilient and is a metaphor for the investigations at the core of my practice which involves making the Black Body visible. I deploy craft-based processes and my work is often ephemeral and temporary.

  2. What was your previous role and what did it involve?
    Previously I was the BA Fine Art Course Leader at Chelsea College of Arts/UAL. I led the staff team in the running of the course and was also a personal tutor for 30 students a year. I particularly enjoyed teaching in year 1 when students are starting on their creative learning journey. I consider teaching to be part of my practice as an artist. Before Chelsea I was an associate lecturer at CSM where I taught on the BA Fine Art XD pathway as a personal tutor.

  3. What is your vision for the Slade?
    At the core of my vision for the Slade is to strengthen equity in relation to staff and students and reduce barriers to inclusion and progress. I want to nurture and strengthen the diverse voices and experiences that make up the community of practice at the Slade.

  4. Which artists do you admire?
    Kara Walker, Zanele Muholi, Carrie Mae Weems, El Anatsui, Sonia Boyce.

  5. What advice would you give to artists starting their careers?
    Say ‘yes’ to opportunities, apply for opportunities: open calls, residencies, calls for papers etc. Even if you may not be immediately successful, you never know who will see and remember your work and contact you in the future.
Poster for Grace Lee: Fitting Room at Huxley Parlour, opening Tuesday 24 October, 6-8pm. Show open 25 October - 25 November, 45 Maddox Streret, W1S 2PE
Poster for Grace Lee: Fitting Room at Huxley Parlour, 2023

Grace Lee has a solo show, Fitting Room, at Huxley Parlour, 45 Maddox Street, London W1S 2PE, from 25 October - 25 November 2023.

Grace Lee completed their MFA in 2021 and was awarded the Bartolomeu dos Santos Award in 2021. They said: "The award really has been such a help since graduating, and allowed me to keep working as an artist without constant financial pressure".

Installation views of Jesse Darling, Enclosures, at Camden Art Centre 2022. Photos by Eva Herzog. Courtesy of Camden Art Centre
Installation view of Jesse Darling, Enclosures, at Camden Art Centre 2022.  

Photos by Eva Herzog. Courtesy of Camden Art Centre

Congratulations to Jesse Darling, who has been nominated for the Turner Prize 2023 for his solo exhibitions No Medals, No Ribbons at Modern Art Oxford and Enclosures at Camden Art Centre.

An exhibition of shortlisted artists' work is now showing at Towner Eastbourne, East Sussex, from 28 September 2023 to 14 April 2024. The winner will be announced on 5 December 2023 at an award ceremony in Eastbourne’s Winter Gardens.

Installation photo of stones, the first with the text: 0º00 Navigation Part II: A Journey Across Europe and Africa
0º00 Navigation Part II: A Journey Across Europe and Africa, Simon Faithfull, 2023

©the artist

This installation, part of the public art project, The Line, forms part of a body of work called 0º00 Navigation by artist Simon Faithfull. It relates to two epic journeys he undertook in order to trace the 0° line of longitude (the Greenwich Meridian) across the planet. It seeks to explore the paradoxes and absurdities of this hypothetical line.

Two films documenting Faithfull’s journeys, available on The Line webpage, will also be on show at Cody Dock Gallery Saturdays and Sundays 1-5pm, until 1 October.

Figurative study, in ink
Study for Crivelli’s Garden, 1990‑91, Paula Rego, 1990‑91, Indian ink and wash on paper, 29.5 × 40.5 cm

Courtesy Ostrich Arts Ltd and Victoria Miro © Ostrich Arts Ltd

More than 30 years after Dame Paula Rego (1935–2022), the National Gallery’s first Associate Artist (1990–92), was invited to create a mural for the Sainsbury Wing Dining Room, a new exhibition celebrates the relationship of one of the most ambitious of Rego’s public commissions titled Crivelli’s Garden to the National Gallery and its collection.

Room 46, National Gallery, London until 29 October 2023, admission free.

Creative Education Manifesto banner image
Creative Visual Arts Network England (CVAN) Art is Essential banner, 2023

Ahead of party conference season, a coalition of creative and higher education organisations have launched their #ArtIsEssential Creative Education Manifesto, calling on all political parties to commit collectively to restoring creative arts education.

The manifesto asks have been co-created by the Contemporary Creative Visual Arts Network (CVAN) a coalition of creative and higher education groups representing the whole of the UK, higher education institutions, arts and crafts sectors all operating and committed to the #ArtIsEssential campaign mission, including the Slade.

For more information see the Contemporary Visual Arts Network England website.

Download the Creative Education Manisfesto (pdf)

We are pleased to announce that this year's Scientist in Residence is Duncan Greig, professor of genetics in the Centre for Life’s Origins and Evolution (CLOE). He is the sixth Slade Scientist in Residence.

This year's Conservator in Residence is Rachel Reynolds. She is in her final year of the MSc Conservation for Archaeology and Museums at UCL’s Institute of Archaeology. Her primary research throughout the first year of the program has been on pigment analysis, particularly ancient Egyptian pigments.

Find out more on the Material Research Project blog pages.

Film still of Lorenza Mazzetti laughing
Film still from Together with Lorenza Mazzetti, 2023

©Brighid Lowe

The London premiere of Together with Lorenza Mazzetti (2023), a new documentary by Brighid Lowe, based on candid interviews given when Lorenza was 90, takes place on 13 September at BFI Southbank.

Together with Lorenza Mazzetti will screen with the first attested public screening of Lorenza’s second film The Country Doctor (1953), based on Kafka, lost until now. In Together with Lorenza Mazzetti she talks about the film for the first time. 

Following the screening of Together with Lorenza Mazzetti and The Country Doctor, Brighid Lowe and researcher Henry K. Miller will take part in a discussion with Carol Morley (Dreams of a Life, The Falling).

Lorenza Mazzetti (1927-2020) is best known as a filmmaker for Together (1956), which is included in a separate programme on the same evening along with her debut short K (1953). In recent years Lorenza Mazzetti has been recognised for her books London Diary, a memoir of the 1950s, and The Sky is Falling, recently republished in a beautiful edition by Another Gaze Editions.

Joint tickets for the screenings on 13 September are available for a special price (you must phone or physically present yourself at the BFI box office for this offer): book via the BFI website.

Photo of building in distant landscape at dusk

Slade Scientist in Residence 2023-24, Duncan Greig, led an avant garde of ten artists and biologists to UCL’s field station in the remote Old Lifeboat House on Blakeney Point in Norfolk. The group spent two days exploring similarities between scientific and artistic practices, creating new connections and ideas for future collaborations, and making some novel artworks inspired by the place and the occasion. Outputs included paper and pigments made from algae, phytograms and 16mm film images, ceramics and assemblages of materials found on the beach, and, of course, paintings and sketches of the inspiring landscape. A common theme was the representation of genetics, evolution, and ecology in art, and the group enjoyed putting many of new ideas into practice. We hope to make this a regular annual event. 

"I loved every second of this trip, but what I was most excited about was a simple method we developed that to make artwork by an evolutionary process inspired by both biological inheritance and traditional drawing exercises. It’s absolutely thrilling to be able to make connections like this across such diverse disciplines." —Duncan Greig  
"I visit Blakeney often, including an annual field class for biology students. Spending a few days there with a bunch of talented and insightful artists has given me a whole new perspective on the place. At times it was challenging—particularly taking part in speed-drawing exercises—but I’ve been awakened to subtle but important details in the landscape and ecology that I’ve never noticed before. Since leaving Blakeney, I’ve been working with one of the artists to research the use of algae in paper making. I’m concerned about the increased frequency of algal blooms at Blakeney and the potential ecological impact of these. Our research suggests that there is a long lost history of paper making using some freshwater algal species, and understanding the biology of the algae is important for the process. I’m looking forward to more paper making experiments, and hopefully some new ways of visualising how algal populations are changing over time." —Izzy Bishop  
"I really enjoyed the experience and the friendly and collaborative atmosphere has given me so much food for thought. It was great to see how people explored their artistic and scientific interests in the unique landscape of Blakeney Point. I learnt from other people’s practices, such as experimental approaches to making art materials from elements found in the landscape and how vintage photographic processes can offer an alternative perspective of the contemporary environment. The trans-disciplinary dialogues were really helpful, and I had some interesting and exciting conversations about making collaborative artworks about ecological and evolutionary change." —Mary Yacoob 
"Despite my childhood holidays being spent with my family in Blakeney, this trip to the Far Point opened up a whole new perspective. In particular learning about; the geological terrain, migratory species and the ever-changing landscape of North Norfolk. I am interested to explore artistic devices found in the emotive handling of colour and nature, so the conversations and collaborative group exercises between the ecologists, scientists, artists and pigment specialist was extremely insightful. I look forward to evolving this poetic, outdoor period back in the studio and will use my sketchbook ‘colour beginnings’ to expand my ideas, inspired by this wild and moving environment." —Jessie Stevenson  
"Bringing a small box of art materials to Blakeney Point I had no preconceived notion or plan of how it would be or what I would make. I found that spending time in such a strange and intriguing landscape with a great group of people to be a real privilege. Many interesting things were discussed and formed in dunes, waves, mud and at dinner table. I am particularly excited to be coming away with ideas for a collaborative project exploring algae as a paper-making material." —Rob Rivers 
Portrait photograph of Mary Evans
Mary Evans, May 2023

Photo credit: Christa Holka

We are delighted to announce the appointment of Mary Evans as new Director of the Slade.

She will succeed Slade Professor Kieren Reed, who has served a five-year tenure as Director since September 2018, leading the Slade through a period of extraordinary challenges including the COVID-19 pandemic.

Mary Evans is an artist with a national and international reputation, having exhibited extensively as a solo artist and in group exhibitions. Her research centres on the social, political, geographical and historical frameworks of diaspora, migration, global mobility and exchange. She is coming to the Slade from Chelsea College of Art, University of the Arts London (UAL) where she has been BA Fine Art Course Leader for five years. As an educator, she is invested in challenging barriers to education and widening access to the arts.

We look forward to welcoming her when she takes up the post on 4 October 2023.

Read the full article on the UCL Faculty of Arts and Humanities website.

Photo of large purple and light blue letters, spelling "UCL" in front of the UCL Portico in the main Quad.
UCL Letters, July 2023, designed by Yiwen Li, 2023

Photo: Giles Corby

Congratulations to recent MFA graduate Yiwen Li, whose design for UCL's standalone large-scale letters was unveiled in front of the Portico on the Main Quad on 3 July.

The UCL letters have increasingly become a part of the campus landscape and will remain in the Main Quad throughout the summer, providing a perfect photo opportunity for any visitors to the Bloomsbury campus.

The competition for students at the Slade School of Fine Art was set up in recognition of the interest from students across the year and particularly during the graduation period to create memories of their time at UCL. They are also vital tools in signposting, with the letters acting as an “arrival point” to students and visitors on campus.

The competition to design the letters, which was announced at the beginning of this year, was a collaborative project between UCL Campus Experience & Infrastructure (CE&I) team and the Slade. The project was facilitated by Sam Wilkinson, Head of Public Art, UCL, Slade's Jo Volley, Deputy Director (Projects), and Giles Corby.

Jo Volley, Deputy Director (Projects) said:

“We are pleased to give our students the opportunity to participate in this public art project. Congratulations to the winners on their designs! Many thanks to Sam Wilkinson and UCL Estates Campus Experience & Infrastructure for supporting this project. The UCL large letter sign is now an iconic part of the UCL estate, and an integral part of student, staff and public's experience – especially now at graduation time."

Tracy Smith (Director of Campus Experience and Commercial Services) said:

“Campus Experience are working with colleagues across UCL to develop collaborative projects that inspire students to create work that enhances our campus and community engagement. This project was particularly successful, as the final artwork unveiling created the perfect backdrop for new graduates (and others) to take memorable photos on the Main Quad.”

Student winner, Yiwen Li, said:

“I am so honoured to have my design selected by the UCL letters competition. It’s been a pleasant cooperation with UCL Team and a massive relief to have their support with the process and installation. Thank you so much for this great opportunity!”

Following the success of this initial project, CE&I will be leading a festive bauble competition at UCL. The winning bauble design will be featured at the Festive Lights Switch-On in November in the Main Quad and there are plans in motion for it to be produced as a limited-edition item from the UCL shop.

CE&I look forward to seeing the other winning designs around UCL in the future, as they continue to co-produce with students and staff to improve the campus experience for all.

Congratulations to Dr Katrina Palmer, Undergraduate Sculpture Lead, who has been awarded an honorary degree from the University of Sussex. She received the award in July 2023, which recognises those who have made outstanding contributions to society. This year's awardees were Baroness Amos, Paul Barber OBE, Lord Peter Hain and Dr Gail Lewis.

Full details are on the University of Sussex Broadcast webpage.

Installation view of screen showing black and white image of Pompeii
PAST PRESENT. As if asleep ...  , Ioana Marinescu, 2023

Lockdown research residency, Beaconsfield London.

©the artist

Research symposium: "Dreams and Guilt. Exhibiting counter-narratives" at Beaconsfield, 22 Newport Street, London SE11 6AY, on Wednesday 19 July 2023, 10.00-17.00, convened by Ioana Marinescu and Naomi Siderfin.

Presentations include those by current PhD students and alumnae Jumana Abboud, Ioana Marinescu, Bindu Mehra, Naomi Siderfin and Shino Yanai.

A small number of audience tickets are available via Eventbrite. Lunch included.

Dreams and Guilt. Exhibiting counter-narratives is convened by Ioana Marinescu and Naomi Siderfin to reflect on their respective, recently completed, doctoral research at Slade School of Fine Art, and Smaranda Găbudeanu as part of her MA research at CESI (Center of Excellence in Image Studies) Bucharest. This practice-led symposium takes place a few days before the public opening (21 July) of PAST PRESENT. Fragments of Memory: Bucharest–Pompeii–London, co-produced by Beaconsfield and PETEC – and contributes to the process of exhibiting.

Installation photograph of studio with figurative paintings on walls, and sculptures of entwined snooker cues and bar tap with glass
Installation photograph: Lydia Merrett (paintings) and George Richardson (sculptures), MA/MFA Degree Show, 2023

©Thomas Jenkins

Congratulations to the students who have been awarded as follows:

Boise Scholarship: Chantal Goulder and George Richardson
Dolbey Scholarship: Enzo Vieira Medeiros
Jeanne Szego Scholarship: Bowen Zhang
Painter Stainers: Beth McAlester
Almacantar Studio Award: Lydia Merrett (Studio Prize) and Rosie Kennedy (Runner up prize)
Adrian Carruthers Award: Sam Meredith
Cass Art: Alessia Marullo
Kenneth Armitage: Elinor Haynes
The Olive: Antonia Holguin Caicedo
Bartolomeu Dos Santos: Raphaella Pester
Max Werner Drawing Prize: Jack Kinsman
Michael Farrell: Scarlet Griffiths

Film still of person wearing a pig face mask riding a shopping trolley in an underground industrial building.
Horror Flick, Joe Moss, 2023, moving image

©the artist

Current MFA student Joe Moss and alumni Cai Arfon Bellis, Ranny Macdonald, Jil Mandeng, Joe Moss, James Dearlove and Korallia Stergides have been selected for Bloomberg New Contemporaries 2023. 

The exhibition will launch at Grundy Art Gallery, Blackpool, from 30 September to 16 December 2023 before travelling to the Camden Art Centre, London, from 19 January to 31 March 2024.

Details of artists can be found on the New Contemporaries website

Poster for Poster for Time, Labour, Process at Unit 1 Gallery, 16 - 24 June, 2023. Private view, 15 June, 6-9pm. Bookings via website. Curated by Shamica Ruddock: artists Dita Hashi, Elora Kadir, Natasha Muluwela.
Poster for Time, Labour, Process at Unit 1 Gallery, 2023

Alumna Elora Kadir is showing in Time, Labour, Process, an exhibition of works by Acme’s Alternative Pathway Awards recipients, celebrating their shared experiences and individual practices. A Genesis Kickstart Fund project, supported by the Genesis Foundation, the awards provided space, time, and support for recipients of the award to work on their practices, culminating in this exhibition. The show takes place at Unit 1 Gallery, 1 Bard Road, London W10 6TP, from 16 - 24 June 2023.Spanning moving image, installation, and pencil drawings, the works address themes of labour, uprising, bureaucracy, violence, and migration.Free, reserve your ticket on: https://artsvp.com/6350a4

Collage of 3 synchronised swimmers in water
Water Dancers, Clotilde Jiménez, 2023, collage

©the artist

Congratulations to alumnus Clotilde Jiménez, who has been invited to take part in the Paris 2024 Artistic Poster programme, part of the Paris 2024 Cultural Olympiad. Each artist was tasked with creating two posters: one representing the Olympics Games Paris 2024 and one representing the Paralympic Games Paris 2024.

He writes: "My job as an artist is to represent and document the world that I exist in and I want these artworks to reflect the Paris that I know and that reflects the Olympic Ideals of excellence, friendship, and respect.

It's an immense honour to be a part of the time-honoured tradition of crafting these iconic posters. Here's to the world uniting in the spirit of sport, breaking down barriers and celebrating the power of unity—Let the games begin! "

Read more about the project on the International Olympic Committee News website.