An Arts Council Collection National Partners Programme Exhibition.
VIEW A 360 TOUR OF THE EXHIBITION
Seen is co-curated by young LGBTQIA+ people from Cornwall aged between 11 – 19 working in partnership with LGBT+ charity Intercom Trust, and SHARP, Programme Producer.
Through workshops and conversation about contemporary art the young people have explored the importance of representation within art and culture and the many sides of what it means to be seen. The expanding subject of Queer art involves an important history of reclamation, resistance, love and freedom and often explores personal experiences as well as depictions of LGBTQIA+ cultures.
This exhibition increases young LGBTQIA+ people’s engagement with contemporary art, allows them to create a platform that speaks to them, for new voices to be heard and for them to be seen.
LGBTQIA+ artists with work from the Arts Council Collection in the exhibition include:
Francis Bacon / Flo Brooks / Duncan Grant / Sunil Gupta / Maggi Hambling / David Hockney / Howard Hodgkin / Evan Ifekoya / Michael Craig-Martin / David Robilliard / P. Staff / Wolfgang Tillmans
In addition there are new exhibition commissions by LGBTQIA+ artists Rosanne Robertson, and RTiiiKA, plus other works by Claude Cahun, Rebel Dykes, Derek Jarman, Amy Pennington, SHARP, Serena Wadham, and YAY.
See the Seen digital noticeboard for all things relating to the exhibition.
There is a series of events running alongside the exhibition, including Communal Cherub A Capellas, a talk and performance with George Morl, and Enduring Care, a video programme highlighting strategies of community care within the ongoing HIV epidemic.
See Read More below for Talk Art podcasts with Seen artists
Dogs are not permitted in the gallery spaces during this exhibition but they are welcome in the shop and cafe areas.
Newlyn Art Gallery & The Exchange is an Arts Council Collection National Partner. The Arts Council Collection is managed by Southbank Centre, London on behalf of Arts Council England.
Find out more about the Arts Council Collection National Partners Programme.