Catto Gallery / Christmas Exhibition 2021
Exhibitions, Catto Gallery, London, All Posts Chuck Elliott Exhibitions, Catto Gallery, London, All Posts Chuck Elliott

Catto Gallery / Christmas Exhibition 2021

Catto Gallery’s latest group show is on until the end of January, after a brief break for Christmas, featuring mostly smaller works by most, if not all, of the artists on the gallery roster.

I’m lucky enough to have four pieces in the show, alongside some really beautiful paintings by Derek Balmer, PPRWA, who has become a friend since our first two person outing at Catto some ten years ago now. Recommended.

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Curious Duke Gallery, a new pop up show curated by Jess Lloyd-Smith, September 2015
Exhibitions, Modern Art Buyer, All Posts Chuck Elliott Exhibitions, Modern Art Buyer, All Posts Chuck Elliott

Curious Duke Gallery, a new pop up show curated by Jess Lloyd-Smith, September 2015

Jess Lloyd-Smith's Modern Art Buyer project is hosting a fabulous new exhibition of work at the Curious Duke Gallery, located at the top of Brick Lane, my old stomping ground throughout the nineties.

I'll be showing works including Radial / ONE and Blast FIRST alongside gallery artists Maria Rivans, Bonnie and Clyde, Jane Emberson, Emma Cowlam, Alexander Johnson and Rebecca King. Should be well worth a look.

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Touch / Screen : Chuck Elliott and Matthew Small at the James Freeman Gallery
Exhibitions, James Freeman Gallery, Lyric, All Posts Chuck Elliott Exhibitions, James Freeman Gallery, Lyric, All Posts Chuck Elliott

Touch / Screen : Chuck Elliott and Matthew Small at the James Freeman Gallery

Look around you in a public place, and almost everyone will be somewhere else, lost in their own virtual otherwhere. This is the digital future: absent communication. Touch/Screen sets out to look at that gap we fall into between the physical and the virtual, using the work of two very different artists: Matthew Small, a painter of raw tactile portraits of urban youth, and Chuck Elliott, a digital artist who gives structure and colour to the digital ether. Somewhere in between is where we spend an increasing part of our lives – somewhere between touch and the screen.

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