Castlefield Gallery, Manchester

LAUNCH | 40 Years of the Future: Castlefield Gallery 40 year anniversary
&
PREVIEW | 40 Years of the Future: Painting

Wednesday 20 March 2024, 7:30 – 9pm
Castlefield Gallery, 2 Hewitt Street, Manchester, M15 4GB

Join us for the launch of our 40 year anniversary programme with the preview of the exhibition 40 Years of the Future: Painting.

Please note, capacity will be limited. To attend, book your free ticket here

If you book a ticket, your plans change and you can no longer attend, please inform Castlefield Gallery of this as soon as possible as we will be operating a waiting list.

40 Years of the Future

This year, Manchester’s much treasured Castlefield Gallery celebrates 40 years. 2024 marks four decades of the gallery nurturing and championing the talent, skills and careers of visual artists, culture and creative independents in Manchester, the North West and beyond!

Castlefield Gallery was established in 1984 by artists, graduates of Manchester School of Art (Manchester Metropolitan University) operating as Manchester Artists’ Studio Association (MASA). The foresight of this group spearheaded the first gallery and charity of its kind to open its doors in the city of Manchester. At the time, outside of London it was one of only a few public not-for-profit galleries dedicated to contemporary visual arts.

Being able to celebrate 40 years of Castlefield Gallery is something very special, no more so given the charity’s roots as an artist-led initiative. The anniversary programme, 40 Years of the Future, will include free exhibitions that bring together exceptional works by extraordinary artists, as well as a dynamic series of public events, performances, screenings, creative community and artist development activities. The programme will unfold across the year, spotlighting the city and region’s wealth of artistic talent and vibrant cultural scenes past and present, whilst looking ahead to the next 40 years.

Join us on 20 March 2024 for the preview of 40 Years of the Future: Painting, exactly 40 years to the day the gallery first opened its doors in 1984 with the remarkable John Hoyland: Recent Paintings.

40 Years of the Future: Painting will bring together large abstract paintings that were either shown or are representative of works exhibited in its first year of programming. The returning artists are Sarah Feinmann, Tricia Gillman, John Hoyland, and Gary Wragg. Each will present past work alongside more recent paintings, and will be joined by four artists based in the North West, tipped as ones to watch by Castlefield Gallery: Jamie Kirk, Robin Megannity, Azraa Motala and Katie Tomlinson.

40 Years of the Future: Painting promises to be an unashamed celebration of all things painting!

2024-05-28T02:28:48+00:0028 May, 2024|exhibition|

Motion and Stillness Retrospective 1963-2019

Gary Wragg
Private View

13th June, 18:00-21:00
Exhibition continues

 

Open between 10:00 and 16:00 from Tuesday to Thursday unitl 5th of July, for appointments outside these times please contact Matthew Macaulay at: sayhello@weareclassroom.com

Step Ladder 2 & Grand Baigneur, Oil on canvas, 1996

 

Blue, Acrylic on canvas, 1977

Lanchester Research Gallery

Graham Sutherland Building, Cox St, Coventry CV1 5PH

Gary Wragg is represented by:

The Nine British Art
9 Bury Street, St James’s,
London,
SW1Y 6AB

For any inquiries;
020 7930 9293

www.theninebritishart.co.uk
info@theninebritishart.co.uk

2019-05-22T13:53:43+00:0021 May, 2019|exhibition|

A reinvigorated hang of 20th and 21st century art

A new display of art from the 20th and 21st centuries can be viewed in Gallery 11. It includes works by well-known artists from the first half of the century such as Pablo Picasso, L. S. Lowry and Ben Nicholson, as well as a vibrantly coloured painting of 1997 Oval Works, Gaze Left by Gary Wragg, which was given by the Friends of the Fitzwilliam Museum.

This reinvigorated hang has been devised to show to their full advantage pieces of furniture acquired for the Museum by Sir Nicholas and Lady Goodison. A marvellous and intriguing acquisition, Egon Schiele Chair by Colin Harris, designed to echo the form and colour of the Austrian artist’s seated female figure (1917) is shown for the first time. In this year celebrating the centenary of women’s suffrage we have the work of three female artists on display: Barbara Hepworth, Marie Louise von Motesïczky and Prunella Clough. We have also selected works on paper as part of the new hang, which include prints lent to us by The Keatley Trust, and a full length nude self-portrait drawing by Stanley Spencer, on loan to us from the Frua-Valsecchi collection. This section also includes some prints given to the Museum by Sir Alan Bowness, including a lithograph by Roger Bissière.

2018-10-09T22:41:36+00:009 October, 2018|exhibition|

Transformations – Gary Wragg

In this short film, Gary Wragg is in conversation with Gallery Director Myles Corley, at the end of the first day of hanging ‘Transformations’.

Both Robin Greenwood and Gary Wragg see abstract art in terms of freedom. Beginning with freedom for the artist, this is ultimately and most importantly a freedom for the viewer. Both artists offer us a freedom to explore, to imaginatively engage with – and be moved by – structures discovered in the process of creation. Both artists envision space as manifold, articulating it with structures which are multi-dimensional, full of diversity. They encourage an active viewer. They want to keep us on our toes.

Complexity is approached in different ways, guided by their very different temperaments and their understanding of the different demands of their medium. Rooted in gestural abstraction, Wragg’s images often seem to shift, with moments of precision emerging from a general disorientating melee. He wants his images to contain an exciting and risky instability and a slowly developing order: his ideal is ‘stillness within movement; movement within stillness.’ Greenwood’s constructions are also improvised, but more securely and patiently realised, with the definite connection of one piece of steel to the next. His sculptures hold together tightly and unfold slowly, moving through space in a way which demands that the viewer also keeps on the move. Together Greenwood’s sculptures and Wragg’s paintings offer parallel conceptions of a world in a state of flux.

Since 2017 Greenwood has been making steel sculptures that hang suspended from the ceiling. We plan to show three of these at Linden Hall. One of the main effects of the suspension is to bring the sculptures into the space of paintings – which are themselves lifted off the floor and hung on the surrounding walls. Seeing how these new sculptures interact with Wragg’s paintings is what I am most looking forward to in Transformations.

Sam Cornish, March 2018

2018-05-05T19:27:48+00:005 May, 2018|exhibition|

Transformations, New Exhibition coming up…

Sculptures by Robin Greenwood and Paintings by Gary Wragg
Curated by Sam Cornish

Both Robin Greenwood and Gary Wragg see abstract art in terms of freedom. Beginning with freedom for the artist, this is ultimately and most importantly a freedom for the viewer. Both artists offer us a freedom to explore, to imaginatively engage with – and be moved by – structures discovered in the process of creation. Both artists envision space as manifold, articulating it with structures which are multi-dimensional, full of diversity. They encourage an active viewer. They want to keep us on our toes.

Complexity is approached in different ways, guided by their very different temperaments and their understanding of the different demands of their medium. Rooted in gestural abstraction, Wragg’s images often seem to shift, with moments of precision emerging from a general disorientating melee. He wants his images to contain an exciting and risky instability and a slowly developing order: his ideal is ‘stillness within movement; movement within stillness.’ Greenwood’s constructions are also improvised, but more securely and patiently realised, with the definite connection of one piece of steel to the next. His sculptures hold together tightly and unfold slowly, moving through space in a way which demands that the viewer also keeps on the move. Together Greenwood’s sculptures and Wragg’s paintings offer parallel conceptions of a world in a state of flux.

Since 2017 Greenwood has been making steel sculptures that hang suspended from the ceiling. We plan to show three of these at Linden Hall. One of the main effects of the suspension is to bring the sculptures into the space of paintings – which are themselves lifted off the floor and hung on the surrounding walls. Seeing how these new sculptures interact with Wragg’s paintings is what I am most looking forward to in Transformations.

Sam Cornish, March 2018

 

more info…

2018-04-18T21:53:52+00:0018 April, 2018|exhibition|
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