Exhibition

Back From the Front presents: Shock and Awe - Contemporary Artists at War and Peace

19 Jul 2014 – 17 Sep 2014

Event times

pening times OPENING HOURS Galleries and café Closed Mondays Tuesday — Saturday: 10am — 6pm Sunday: 11am — 5pm Last admission 30 minutes before closing. Before travelling, please call ahead to check opening hours as we occasionally close for special events.

Cost of entry

Gift Aid admission: Adults: £5.00 Concessions: £3.50 Standard admission: Adults: £4.50 Concessions : £3.10 Art Fund card admission: £2 Under 16s/SGS, UoB & UWE students: FREE Return ticket: £8 (unlimited repeat visits for exhibition duration)

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Back From the Front presents: Shock and Awe - Contemporary Artists at War and Peace

About

It is an uncomfortable truth, but conflict has long fascinated artists, poets and writers. Wilfred Owen, probably the most articulate purveyor of the pity of war, returned to the front lines not just to be with his men, but because he understood that the dreadfulness of war fuelled his imagination, honing his poetic sensibilities as nothing else could. His poetry acts as both witness and warning, and like so many of the greatest art works of the twentieth century, serves as a salutary reminder of the dreadful consequences of armed conflict. ‘Shock and Awe' is an exhibition of work by contemporary artists recently exposed to the front-line of war in Iraq, Afghanistan and the Balkans. It is also a platform for artists who are fascinated by acts of remembrance, who use their art as a warning, as a form of protest at the wickedness of the world. All of the artists in this exhibition have worked in highly demanding, often very stressful conditions: Jill Gibbon makes drawings at arms fairs all over the world; Mario Minichiello and Xavier Pick were commissioned to record British and US troops in the war zones of Iraq; David Cotterrell was supported by the Wellcome Foundation to travel to Basra and Helmand Province to record the arduous work of the British Medical Corps. Tim Shaw RA makes iconic large-scale sculptural pieces that pass acerbic comment on recent and distant war; Elizabeth Turrell RWA has been working for over a decade with a group of medal-makers from the US, UK and Europe to create anti-war and peace medals. Katie Davies has made a film about the repatriation ceremonies at Royal Wootton Bassett. Derived from 14 separate visits to the town, Davies's film installation is an extraordinary evocation of loss, mourning and absence. Alongside these powerful evocations of war and peace, a number of artists have created work in response to war: Michael Sandle RA and Emma Stibbon RWA RA react to monumental sculptures across Europe; the late Richard Hamilton's ‘Medal of dishonour' offers a searing critique of political subterfuge; Ian Chamberlain reflects on the industrial technologies of conflict; Lucy Willis RWA responds to the plight of the dispossessed, while Paul Gough RWA draws on the emblematic power of civic statuary to explore how memory is shaped and controlled in our over-crowded urban spaces. Back From the Front - Art, Memory and the Aftermath of War explores the theme of conflict and memory across a series of interrelated exhibitions including Brothers in Art: John and Paul Nash; Shock and Awe, and The Death of Nature. The exhibition and programme is curated by Professor Paul Gough supported by Arts Council England, the Bristol Cultural Development Partnership and the University of the West of England, Bristol.

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