Colin Self: Art in the Nuclear Age 

21. Jun - 12. Oct 08 / ended Pallant House Gallery

Tues- Sat 10am - 5pm, Sunday 12.30pm - 5pm, Late night Thursday - 8pm

Exhibition | Multi-disciplinary | South East


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Colin Self, Waiting Women and Two Nuclear Bombers (1962-63) (c) Colin Self. All rights reserved DACS 2008

Colin Self, Waiting Women and Two Nuclear Bombers (1962-63) (c) Colin Self. All rights reserved DACS 2008


Colin Self: Art in the Nuclear Age

A leading figure in the 1960s British Pop Art movement, Colin Self (b.1941) is best known for his explorations of life during the Cold War period. While his work has depicted many aspects of modern consumer culture including glamorous Sixties models, hot dogs and stylish Art Deco cinemas, it has also addressed the darker side of the epoch: ferocious guard dogs on missile bases, women in fallout shelters and the threat of nuclear weapons.

His meticulously rendered drawings and watercolours led the artist Richard Hamilton to call Self ‘the best draughtsman in England since William Blake’, but he is also an innovative printmaker, sculptor, painter and collagist, who continues to combine wit, originality and visual intelligence in his work.

This major survey, curated by Simon Martin, offers the most comprehensive overview of Colin Self’s work to date, and brings together over one hundred works in a range of media from the 1960s to the present day. Colin Self is arguably the artist of the nuclear age whose work brilliantly articulates the anxieties of the era.


http://www.pallant.org.uk


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