I Can’t Breathe
It’s time for every person in the world to speak out against inequality and racism. Read a statement from Aesthetica’s Director, Cherie Federico.
It’s time for every person in the world to speak out against inequality and racism. Read a statement from Aesthetica’s Director, Cherie Federico.
“Being placed into suspended animation has meant that, time becomes an elastic concept.” We interview White Cube about their latest show.
Rachael Gallagher’s practice explores the sublimity of nature and an inability to recreate the awe one feels when viewing something such as the sea
Rosie Scorer is a photographer, working fundamentally to provide insight into her own experiences through imagery and video.
Alice Denton utilises line and colour to create abstract artworks inspired by an interest in architecture, machinery and most recently decay.
Jake McMylor is a photographer who experiences Aphantasia; a condition that means he lacks visual memory, relying on photographs.
Charlotte Taylor’s recent sculpture series, entitled Creatures, considers abstraction, texture and form, inspired by marine life, such as Cephalopods.
Chloe Heffernan is an illustrator whose art is a fusion of brutalist line work and organic forms, drawing upon natural, pastoral and industrial themes.
Jack Shepherd / Vanya’s work uses fashion as its starting point. Shepherd is influenced by the weird and wonderful and work that pushes boundaries.
Avalon Iris questions how humans can reconnect with the Earth. Nature Transience navigates the connection between humans and the natural world.
Charlotte Marshall is a documentary photographer who focuses on studying relationships, identity and livelihoods across a range of themes and forms.
Alex Appleby’s practice interrogates the line, exploring the endless potential, and more currently a collection of gestural marks layered together.
The work created by the duo JR² consists of found material/surfaces, focusing specifically on accessible material with a child-like approach.
Laura Mackenzie focuses primarily on underwater photography. She draws her audience to the critical need for education about ocean wild life.
Heather Mottram explores textiles and natural materials and reinterprets the features of objects and structures already in existence.
In her series entitled The Gas Leak, Emily Cholerton captures dreamlike scenes of her grandmother, in reference to themes of visions and premonitions.
Elliot Hutchinson’s hand-drawn and painted images are hallucinatory, where fantastical characters are bound in new and intriguing ways.
Daisy Ashworth is an artist whose work reflects the nostalgia surrounding childhood memories using images are from her own youth.
Through a material-led practice, Tilly Thornborrow explores family photo albums from the viewpoint of a younger generation.