Simon Callery
Simon Callery (born 1960 in London) is an English artist.
Life and work
He was educated at Campions school, Athens, Greece, and gained a first class honours degree from Cardiff College of Art in 1983. He has worked in Turin, and is now resident in London.
He first exhibited at the Whitechapel Open in 1989. He paints cityscapes which are abstracted to the point of making them conceptual images.
In 1994, Callery was included in the exhibition Young British Artists III at the Saatchi Gallery.
In January 1999, the Saatchi Gallery gave the Arts Council collection 100 works, including work by Callery. The collection is administered by the Hayward Gallery, which arranges loans to regional museums.
April–August 2003, Callery created The Segsbury Project, working with archeologists on a Bronze Age ditch and an Iron Age hill fort on the Ridgeway in Wiltshire and Oxfordshire. The project included sculpture and photographs. This major exhibition was displayed at only two venues in the UK, Dover Castle and the Storey Gallery This gave him the experience of being able "to see how a painter of the urban landscape from London's East End would respond to a paradigm of the English landscape."
Other exhibitions include Art Now at Tate Britain, and Galerie Philippe Casini, Paris (2002).
His work is held in the collection of the Tate.[1]
References
External links
- Photo of Simon Callery
- Callery writes about the Segsbury Project
- A Simon Callery painting
- Simon Callery Interview. Abstract Critical
|