Jump to content

User:Frieda2046/sandbox

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is the current revision of this page, as edited by 192.41.125.255 (talk) at 16:34, 14 September 2021 (More contents and sources added.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.

(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

This is my sandbox page that I can use to practice, experiment and draft new articles.

Toby Paterson
Born
Glasgow
EducationSchool of the Art Institute of Chicago; BA (Hons), Glasgow School of Art; Honorary Doctor of Letters, Glasgow Caledonian University
OccupationArtist
Notable workPowder Blue Orthogonal Pavilion (2008); Poised Array (2007)
AwardsBeck's Futures (2002); Creative Scotland (2006)

Toby Paterson (born 1974) is a visual artist based in Glasgow whose practice explores built spaces, especially post-war modernist architecture, and their cultural outcomes over time. He won the Beck’s Futures Prize in 2002 and in 2007 he was commissioned by BBC Scotland to produce an installation for their headquarters at Pacific Quay, Glasgow.[1]

Life and Education

[edit]

Toby Paterson was born in Glasgow in 1974. He studied at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and at the Glasgow School of Art, from which he graduated in 1995. Additionally, in 2011 he was awarded an Honorary Degree of Doctor of Letters by Glasgow Caledonian University[2], which commissioned him to create three extensive wall-paintings for the Saltire Centre.[3] The artworks entitled 'Potential Form' convey the University's dynamic drive as well as its aim to be an inspirational base for the professional, personal and academic development of its students.[3]

Work

[edit]
Toby Paterson, Poised Array, 2007. Steel, grp, plywood, two-pack paint. Dimensions variable.

Paterson is particularly interested in the relationship between post-war architectures such as housing schemes and ruins of uncompleted or decayed building projects[4] and the economic, social and political ideas behind them.[3] His practice is both informed by his personal experience of places (by skateboarding journeys for instance) and by the history that they entail.[4] Among his artworks are drawings, paintings and sculptural installations for public places[5], which lead viewers to ask themselves how they perceive built environments and how they relate to them.[4]

In 2002 he was the winner of the Beck’s Futures Prize and in 2006 he received a Creative Scotland Award.[5] He is also the recipient of several public commissions, such as Poised Array for the façade of the BBC Scotland Headquarters in Glasgow (2007) and the Powder Blue Orthogonal Pavilion (2008), part of the Portavilion project in London. Other commissions include a series of artworks for the extension of the Docklands Light Railway for the London Olympics (2012)[1], The Sociology of Autumn for Edinburgh Art Festival (Chessels Court, Edinburgh, 2017), Cluster Relief (Dunfermline Remnant) created for Dunfermline Carnegie Library & Galleries (2017), Hatton Pavilion (Various locations, Newcastle & Gateshead, 2017) and Shifting Landscape at the Renfrew Health and Social Work Centre (2010).[2]

Solo Exhibitions

[edit]
  • 2020    ‘Atlantic’, The Modern Institute, 3 Aird's Lane, Glasgow
  • 2019    ‘New Aluminium Works’, Stallan-Brand, Glasgow
  • 2018    ‘Two Arrays’, Cairn Gallery, Fife
  •            ‘Penumbralism’, Civic House, Glasgow (As part of Glasgow International 2018)
  • 2017    ‘The Pinwheel’, Bonhoga Gallery, Shetland Arts, Weisdale Mill, Shetland
  • 2015    ‘Thresholds’, Edinburgh Sculpture Workshop, Edinburgh (curated by Judith Winter, part of Edinburgh Art Festival)
  • 2014    ‘Ludic Motif’, Trongate, Glasgow
  •            Gracefield Arts Centre, Dumfries (Part of GENERATION 2014)
  •            ‘20th Century Perspectives: City Spaces & Strings’, Anderston Centre, Glasgow
  •            Tweedale Museum and Gallery, Peebles (Part of GENERATION 2014)
  •            Inverness Museum & Art Gallery, Inverness (Part of GENERATION 2014)
  •            Kirkcaldy Galleries, Kirkcaldy (Part of GENERATION 2014)
  •            ‘Soft Boundary’, The Modern Institute, 14—20 Osborne Street, Glasgow
  • 2013    ‘Our Shadow Codex: Rhona Warwick & Toby Paterson’, Lanchester Gallery Projects, Coventry
  •            ‘Toby Paterson – Clusters’, Galerie Lange + Pult
  •            ‘Reconstructions’, Mário Sequeira Gallery, Braga
  •            Public project in conjunction with Le Grand Cafè, Saint Nazaire (Completion 2013)
  • 2012    ‘An Experiment for Total Environment’, Durham Art Gallery, Durham (with works by Victor Pasmore)
  •            ‘Remnant’, Glasgow Print Studio, Glasgow
  •            ‘Toby Paterson: paintings, prints and reliefs’, SMART gallery, Aberdeen
  •            ‘Quotidian Aspect’, Le Grand Cafè, Saint-Nazaire
  • 2011    ‘Inchoate Landscapes’, Peacock Visual Arts, Aberdeen
  • 2010    Upstairs at The Modern Institute/Toby Webster Ltd, Glasgow
  •            ‘Ever Growing Never Old, Looped’, Pavement, Manchester
  •            ‘New New Festival’, Pallant House, Chichester
  •            ‘Consensus and Collapse’, Fruitmarket Gallery, Edinburgh
  • 2009    ‘Various States’, Void, Derry
  •            ‘Ever Growing Never Old’, The Modern Institute/Toby Webster Ltd, Glasgow
  •            ‘Built Colour’, Galerie Kentworthy Ball, Lang and Pult, Zurich
  •            ‘Installation of Powder Blue Orthogonal Pavilion’, Warwick University, Warwick
  • 2007    ‘Poised Array’, BBC Scotland Headquarters, Glasgow (public commission)
  •            ‘Generosity’, Stroom Den Haag, The Hague
  •            ‘Vague Space’, Sutton Lane, London
  • 2006    ‘Broken Arabesque’, de Vleeshal & de Kabinetten van de Vlesshal, Middelburg
  • 2005    ‘After the Rain’, Curve Gallery, Barbican Centre, London
  •            ‘Blue/Black Plan In Situ’, Galerie Fabienne le Clerc, Paris (edition)
  • 2004    ‘New Festival’, Glassbox, Paris
  •            ‘Exploded Plan’, Sutton Lane, London
  •            ‘An Isometric Plan’, Tate St Ives, Cornwall
  • 2003    ‘Emergency Exit’, 88B, London
  •            ‘Patterns’, Aberdeen Art Gallery, Aberdeen (in association with Peacock Visual Arts)
  •            ‘New Facade’, CCA, Glasgow
  •            ‘Hallfield School Project’, Paddington, London (in association with the Serpentine Gallery)
  •            The Modern Institute/Toby Webster Ltd, Glasgow
  •            ‘New Plan’, Glasgow
  • 2002    ‘Toby Paterson’, Franco Noero, Turin
  • 1999    ‘Halcyon Approach’, The Modern Institute/Toby Webster Ltd, Glasgow[2]

Group Exhibitions

[edit]
  • 2020    ‘Reduct: Abstraction and Geometry in Scottish Art’, RSA, Edinburgh
  •            ‘The 194th RSA Annual Exhibition’, RSA, Edinburgh
  • 2019    ‘Another Country - Contemporary Artists on Immigration’, Inverness Museum & Art Gallery, Inverness
  •            ‘Another Country - Contemporary Artists on Immigration’, Thurso Gallery, Thurso
  •            ‘Next Top Model’, Govan Project Space, Glasgow
  • 2018    ‘Another Country - Contemporary Artists on Immigration’, City Art Centre, Edinburgh (Tours to Inverness Art Gallery & Museum and Thurso Art Gallery throughout 2019)
  •            ‘Innovative Printmaking’, Glasgow Print Studio, Glasgow
  •            ‘Against Time’, Civic Room, Glasgow (As part of Glasgow International 2018)
  •            ‘Early Learning’, Scotland Street School Museum, Glasgow (As part of Glasgow International 2018)
  • 2015    ‘Model Behaviour’, Holden Gallery, Manchester
  •            ‘Devils in the Making’, GOMA, Glasgow
  • 2014    ‘Urban/Suburban’, City Art Centre, Edinburgh (Part of GENERATION 2014)
  •            ‘GENERATION: 25 Years of Contemporary Art in Scotland’, Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh
  •            ‘Sculptural Forms: A Century of Experiment’, Manchester Art Gallery, Manchester
  • 2013    ‘40/40’, Glasgow Print Studio, Glasgow
  • 2012    ‘Tomorrow Was Already Here’, Museo Tamayo, Mexico City
  • 2011    ‘The Sculpture Show’, Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh
  •            ‘Tales of the City: Art Fund International and the GoMA Collection’, Gallery of Modern Art, Glasgow
  •            RSA, Edinburgh (Annual Show)
  • 2010    ‘Does City/Münster matter?’, AZKM, Münster
  •            ‘Les Lendemains d'Hier’
  • 2009    ‘Warsaw Under Construction’, The Museum of Modern Art, Warsaw
  •            ‘SUPERNOVA’, Glynn Vivian Art Gallery, Swansea (British Council touring exhibition. Touring to Bunkier Sztuki Gallery of Contemporary Art, Krakow; Kunstihoone, Tallinn; Centre of Contemporary Art, Vilnius; Prague City ARt Gallery, Prague; Jan Koniarek Gallery, Trnava; Gliptoteka, Zagreb; Multimedia Center, Split; Nicosia Municipal Arts Centre, Nicosia)
  •            ‘Being and Nothingness’, Light and Sie, Dallas
  •            ‘Warsaw Under Construction’, The Museum of Modern Art, Warsaw
  • 2008    ‘Retromorphosis’, Centre for the Urban Built Environment, Manchester
  •            ‘How Much Wood Would a Woodchuck Chuck if a Woodchuck Could Chuck Wood’, Kunstverein Glasgow, Allison Street
  •            ‘100 Year, 100 Artists, 100 Works’, Platform for Art, London
  •            SWG3, Glasgow (Glasgow International 2008)
  • 2007    ‘Language of Vision’, Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art, Middlesbrough
  •            ‘Build It and They Will Come’, Travelling Gallery, Scotland
  •            ‘Echo Room: Art from Britain’, Alcalá 31, Madrid
  • 2006    Ocular Lab, Melbourne
  •            ‘Units Moved’, The Architecture Foundation, London
  •            ‘New Editions/Scotland’, The Print Center, New York
  •            ‘Concrete Thoughts’, The Whitworth Art Gallery, Manchester
  • 2005    ‘Artists explore the language of Architecture’, Fri-Art, Centre d’art contemporain de Fribourg, Fribourg
  •            ‘Art Futures’, Contemporary Art Society, Bloomberg Space
  •            ‘Space Invaders’, Kunsthalle Basel, Basel
  •            ‘Toby Paterson & Tobias Putrih’, Kunstverein, Graz
  • 2003    ‘A Surface in Between’, Art House, London
  •            ‘Contemporary Abstraction’, Glasgow Print Studio, Glasgow
  •            ‘There's no land but the land up (up there is just a sea of possibilities)’, Meyer Riegger Galerie, Karlsruhe
  •            ‘Common Place’, The Lighthouse, Glasgow
  •            ‘Pretty Little Things’, The Ship, London
  • 2002    ‘Toby Paterson & Martin Boyce’, Foksal Gallery Foundation, Warsaw
  •            ‘Half the World Away’, Hallwalls CAC, Buffalo
  •            ‘Greyscale/CMYK’, Tramway, Glasgow
  •            ‘Baltic Babel’, Rooseum, Malmö
  • 2001    ‘NY/G3’, Casey Kaplan, New York
  •            ‘Beyond’, DCA, Dundee
  •            ‘Group Show’, Generator, Dundee (curated by Graham Domke)
  •            ‘New Newquayism’, Glasgow Project Room, Glasgow (with Alex Pollard)
  •            ‘Here and Now’, Peacock Visual Arts, Aberdeen
  •            ‘October, St Vincent Street, Glasgow, Curated by Karla Black & Katie Exley’, St. Vincent Street, Glasgow (Curated by Karla Black and Katie Exley)
  • 2000    ‘Beyond’, DCA, Dundee
  •            Henry Moore Institute, Leeds
  •            ‘Gemini Sculpture Park’, Henry Moore Institute, Leeds
  •            RSA, Edinburgh
  •            ‘Tonight’, The Modern Institute/Toby Webster Ltd, Glasgow
  • 1998    ‘Host’, Tramway, Glasgow (with Elizabeth Go)
  • 1997    ‘Tutor with an Idea’, 3 month Gallery, Liverpool
  • 1996    ‘Independent Studios Exhibitions’, 18 King Street, Glasgow
  •            ‘Leave the Capitol’, Edinburgh College of Art, Edinburgh[2]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "Toby Paterson: a selection of work made over the last ten years". www.e-flux.com. Retrieved 2021-04-19.
  2. ^ a b c d "About Toby Paterson". The Modern Institute. Retrieved 2021-04-19.
  3. ^ a b c webteam@gcu.ac.uk. "Toby Paterson | Glasgow Caledonian University | Scotland, UK". www.gcu.ac.uk. Retrieved 2021-09-14.
  4. ^ a b c "Toby Paterson". www.nationalgalleries.org. Retrieved 2021-09-14.
  5. ^ a b "Toby Paterson | Hatton Gallery". hattongallery.org.uk. Retrieved 2021-04-19.