We Are Not Alone
We Are Not Alone is an exhibition that explores how our common feelings, anxieties and human behaviour can be expressed through the familiar, the peculiar, the uncanny and the transcendental. The exhibited artworks have been selected to encourage dialogue and curiosity.
This group exhibition investigates whether art can offer a common ground to enable us to communicate with one another and the world, and invites you to raise questions, explore doubts and share experiences.
On your journey you will encounter artworks exploring the transcendent and timeless, and pieces, by artists such as Shiazeh Houshiary and Mohammed Qasim Ashfaq, that provide a space for thought and meditation. There are also encounters with artworks, including Ryan Gander鈥檚, which might leave you puzzled or looking for clues.
We Are Not Alone includes works in a large range of media by artists who explore our worries and fears but also invite us to dispel them through open discussion. Providing an end and a beginning, Cerith Wyn Evans and Mark Titchner鈥檚 pieces invite a direct response and are a call for participation in a future where 鈥榳e are not alone鈥.
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We Are Not Alone is an exhibition that explores how our common feelings, anxieties and human behaviour can be expressed through the familiar, the peculiar, the uncanny and the transcendental. The exhibited artworks have been selected to encourage dialogue and curiosity.
This group exhibition investigates whether art can offer a common ground to enable us to communicate with one another and the world, and invites you to raise questions, explore doubts and share experiences.
On your journey you will encounter artworks exploring the transcendent and timeless, and pieces, by artists such as Shiazeh Houshiary and Mohammed Qasim Ashfaq, that provide a space for thought and meditation. There are also encounters with artworks, including Ryan Gander鈥檚, which might leave you puzzled or looking for clues.
We Are Not Alone includes works in a large range of media by artists who explore our worries and fears but also invite us to dispel them through open discussion. Providing an end and a beginning, Cerith Wyn Evans and Mark Titchner鈥檚 pieces invite a direct response and are a call for participation in a future where 鈥榳e are not alone鈥.
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