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Featured Artists

> Jenni Dutton

Jenni works in Somerset. Trained as a painter at St Martins and Byam Shaw in London, Jenni  moved on to make large wire and paper wrapped figures that developed into ‘dresses’. > More

> Pennie Elfick

Contrary to immediate first impressions Pennie’s paintings are firmly based in landscape. Specifically, she attempts to capture the transient nature of light. > More

> Andrew George

It is not so common to find an artist who is so adept with the technique of egg tempera. It is a hard medium to control but Andrew George is particularly masterful with it.> More

> John Hilliard

John Hilliard‘s art investigates the nature of light. Inspired by walks along beaches, his images are not in any way topographical but explorations of the interplay between light, reflected light, sea and sky. > More

> Paul Jones

Paul was a scholarship student at Bath Academy of Art, Corsham at a time when Adrian Heath, Robyn Denny and Howard Hodgkin were his tutors. > More

> Ione Parkin

Ione has spent the past twenty years as a professional artist painting images that reflect elements of the world that she has experienced. > More

> Amanda Wallwork

Wallwork paints history. Her images reflect the marks and traces left behind by people on places and objects, both deliberate and accidental. > More

Sir Eduardo Paolozzi

Eduardo Paolozzi Genral Dynamic FUN 705
 
Eduardo Paolozzi Genral Dynamic FUN 714
 
Eduardo Paolozzi Genral Dynamic FUN 717
 
Eduardo Paolozzi Genral Dynamic FUN 737
 
Eduardo Paolozzi Genral Dynamic FUN 739
 
Paolozzi Mechanical Head
FOCUS ON features prints and sculpture by Sir Eduardo Paolozzi. The prints have been selected from the 1965-70 set ‘General Dynamic F.U.N.’ in which he broke away from the generally accepted norms of fine art printing techniques by brilliantly exploiting the potential of photolithography as well as screenprinting. Only a few prints in each ‘book’ were signed and numbered. Otherwise all have stamped signatures and the mark of Editions Alecto.

Paolozzi created a series of head sculptures in the 1980s that explore the relationship between Man and Machine/Robot. His initial studies were often made by carving into blocks of plaster. Each is unique. The bulk of his collection of plasters along with the entire holding from his London studio can be seen re-assembled on display at the Belford Galleries of The Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh.

Eduardo Paolozzi, the son of Italian parents, was born in Edinburgh in 1924. In 1943 he studied at the College of Art in Edinburgh in 1944 at the St Martin's School of Art and finally at the Slade School of Art in Oxford from 1945 to 1947. There he attends to art from outside Europe, which influenced his early works. Paolozzi spent the years between 1947 and 1949 in Paris, where he got to know Arp, Brancusi, Giacometti and Léger and dealt with Surrealism as well as 'art brut'. Paolozzi was co-founder of the "Independent Group" in London in 1952/53, which discussed thoughts of including trivial culture and that way gave decisive impulses for the development of English Pop-Art. At that time Paolozzi began to be known in foreign countries, in 1952 and 1960 he participated in the Biennale in Venice, in 1959 in the documenta II in Kassel. His early sculptures of the late 1950s were totem-like archetypes of the age of technology in the form of plump robots. Paolozzi's work changed radically in 1961 when he began using prefabricated aluminium and brass casting moulds. The demonic element was replaced by a homage to modern machines and technology. Paolozzi was not only a sculptor; he also produced graphic art and pottery, made films and was a successful writer. Paolozzi taught textile design at the Central School of Art and Design in London from 1949 to 1955 and changed to the St. Martin's School of Art in 1955. He went to Hamburg for two years to teach at the Hochschule für Bildende Künste in 1960 and between 1977 and 1981 he held a chair at the Fachhochschule in Cologne. In 1981 he switched to the Akademie der Bildenden Künste in Munich, where he taught until his retirement in 1994. In 1989 he received the accolade. Since 1999 the main part of his work and his library as well as a reconstruction of his studio are shown at the Dean Gallery, which belongs to the Scottish National Gallery. Eduardo Paolozzi died in London in April 2005. Among Paolozzi's best known works are his works for public places like the design of the tube station Tottenham Court Road in London with coloured mosaics, the realisation of the Rheingarten project in Cologne and the bronze sculpture 'Newton (after Blake)' outside the British Library, London.