Exhibition
The Eye of the Beholder
9 Nov 2021 – 14 Nov 2021
Regular hours
- Tue, 09 Nov
- 10:00 – 18:00
- Wed, 10 Nov
- 10:00 – 18:00
- Thu, 11 Nov
- 10:00 – 18:00
- Fri, 12 Nov
- 10:00 – 18:00
- Sat, 13 Nov
- 10:00 – 18:00
- Sun, 14 Nov
- 10:00 – 18:00
Residency
Address
- Unit G12, North Arcade, Islington Square
- 129E Upper Street
- London
England - N1 1QP
- United Kingdom
This outing into the world of pop-up galleries features Bill Greenhalgh and Angela Morris Winmill. The only overriding principle behind the choice of work presented by 273K Art is whether or not we find it visually exciting. The work of both artists is abstract and visually dramatic.
About
Angela Morris-Winmill
Australian Artist Angela Morris-Winmill has an impressive portfolio spanning painting, print making, sculpture and fashion art. Prior to transitioning in to the world of fine art Angela Morris-Winmill worked successfully as a fashion designer specialising in wedding dresses and designing for brands such as Topshop.
Angela is well known across the London art scene as a regular exhibitor at Roy’s Art Fair and Woolwich Contemporary Print Fair. With numerous sell-out solo exhibitions under her belt, Angela was recently recognised as one of Artsper Magazines Top 10 Emerging Artists of 2020. She has been shortlisted for the RA Summer Exhibition and also exhibited at The Threadneedle Prize, Mall Galleries in the past. Often attracting impressive media attention for her work, including a recent article in the Huffington Post, her strong eye for colour and detail puts Angela Morris-Winmill in a class of her own.
Bill Greenhalgh
Anarchic septugenarian Bill Greenhalgh, creates uncompromising paintings which defy immediate categorisation. He was trained in Bristol by Paul Feiler, and deeply influenced by Roger Hilton, Peter Lanyon, Terry Frost, and others of that grand generation. Essentially, his work is about story-telling. The artist can spin a yarn about every shape. The manic, hopping and jumping imagery is very obviously driven by narratives. Use of strong colour and enigmatic shapes offer an entry into a self-referential universe, a place occupied by objects and creatures of his own invention, where nothining is as it seems.
Bill Greenhalgh has been a painter pretty much all his life, he moved to London in the mid-1970s, and has been there ever since. One of the early occupants of an East End factory space in Bow, where he lived and worked, he now resides south of the river and works in the Thames Side Studio Complex. But to speak to, you might think he had never left Bolton.
His artistic vision is one that taps into the grand heritage of Modernism, and his sources range across the last century, pulling-in things and fusing them with whatever concerns him at the time. The aphorism ‘good artists copy, great artists steal’ has been attributed to Picasso, and whether he said it or not, it is beautifully indicative of that master’s outlook. We can say the same of Greenhalgh. He is a deeply eclectic artist who has always shown the ability to take what he needs from others, in order to make what he wants.