Alex Frost (artist)

Last updated

Alex Frost
Born
Alexis Frost

NationalityEnglish
Education Glasgow School of Art, Staffordshire University [1]
Known for Sculpture, Drawing

Alex Frost is a British contemporary artist, exhibiting internationally.

Contents

Background

Alex Frost currently lives and works in Manchester, UK where he teaches Art and Design at The University of Salford.

Exhibitions

Frost's often humorous work addresses the fluid boundaries between public and private space, the virtual and physical, the temporal and permanent. He is best known for his large mosaic sculptures that depict product packaging and branding. These have been included in exhibitions at Dundee Contemporary Arts, Venice Biennale, Milton Keynes Gallery, Studio Voltaire and Frieze Sculpture Park.

In 2018, he devised ‘Wet Unboxing’, a series of videos he uploaded onto YouTube. [2] In these videos he opened products underwater. The products were all symbolic of a life on the go’, a lifestyle of super-convenience. Vice Motherboard described these videos as ‘a proto-meme—a precious, terrifying embryo—of the next new trend’. [3]

Residencies

In 2015 he was Phynance Resident [4] at Flat Time House, London. His other residencies include Cove Park, [5] Scotland in 2014; The Walled Garden, [6] Glasgow in 2013; AIR Antwerpen, [7] Belgium in 2010; Glenfiddich Artist Residency, [8] Dufftown, Scotland in 2009; Artsway, [9] Hampshire in 2007; Spike Island, Bristol [10] in 2002 and Grizedale Arts, [11] Cumbria in 2000.

Collaborations

In addition to his independent art practice he has been involved in a number of artistic collaborations. Notably, the devising and running of the artist-run radio station Radiotuesday (1998-2002) [12] with Duncan Campbell (artist) and Mark Vernon; Wave Rhythm by Louis Braille (2012) [13] with Stephen Livingstone from Errors (band), a limited edition flexi-disc single generated using a hybrid analogue/digital music and drawing machine and Flourish Nights (2001) [14] a season of screenings and performances organised with the artists Lucy McKenzie, Sophie Macpherson and Julian Kildear.

Collections

Frost's work is held in numerous private and public collections with his mosaic sculpture Adult (Ryvita/Crackerbread)(2007) in the collection of Glasgow Museums [15]

Notes and references

  1. "Alex Frost | City & Guilds | London Art School". www.cityandguildsartschool.ac.uk. Retrieved 14 October 2022.
  2. "Alex Frost". YouTube. Retrieved 6 September 2018.
  3. "I Can't Stop Watching These Disgusting 'Wet Unboxing' Videos". Motherboard. 22 August 2018. Retrieved 6 September 2018.
  4. "PHYNANCE RESIDENCY 2015 ARTIST ANNOUNCED | Projects | Flat Time House".
  5. "Alex Frost « Cove Park".
  6. "Bothy Project | A network of small-scale, off-grid art residency spaces in distinct and diverse locations around Scotland".
  7. "Alex Frost | AIR Antwerpen".
  8. "Arts and Business Scotland".
  9. "MK Gallery – Alex Frost". Archived from the original on 19 April 2016. Retrieved 6 March 2016.
  10. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 20 April 2016. Retrieved 6 March 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  11. "Grizedale Arts: Opportunities: Volunteer Commission 2021".
  12. "Mark Vernon :: Meagre Resource :: Sound Artist". Archived from the original on 28 August 2016. Retrieved 6 March 2016.
  13. "Parallel Worlds: Errors vs Alex Frost | the Skinny".
  14. "Sorcha Dallas · Press · Alex Frost: Neil Mulholland, 'Aperto Scotland', Flash Art, 01/2002".
  15. "Glasgow Museums Collections Online".

Further reading

Related Research Articles

Christine Borland is a Scottish artist. Born in Darvel, Ayrshire, Scotland, Borland is one of the Young British Artists (YBAs) and was nominated for the Turner Prize in 1997 for her work From Life at Tramway, Glasgow. Borland works and lives in Kilcreggan, Argyll, as a BALTIC Professor at the BxNU Institute of Contemporary Art.

Alison Watt OBE FRSE RSA is a British painter who first came to national attention while still at college when she won the 1987 Portrait Award at the National Portrait Gallery in London.

Grizedale Arts is a contemporary arts residency and commissioning agency sited in Grizedale Forest in the central Lake District in rural Northern England. It conducts cultural projects locally, nationally and internationally from its bases at Lawson Park farm and the Coniston Institute. Its focus is on developing emerging artists and producing experimental yet accessible projects that demonstrate the purpose and function of art as an everyday aspect of a worthwhile and productive life. The organisation is financially supported by Arts Council England. Adam Sutherland, the director, guest-curated 'The Land We Live In, The Land We Left Behind' for Hauser & Wirth Somerset in 2018, a major historic and contemporary survey of rural cultures that attracted over 40,000 visitors to the galleries in Bruton.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Royal Society of Sculptors</span> Centre for contemporary sculpture in London

The Royal Society of Sculptors is a British charity established in 1905 which promotes excellence in the art and practice of sculpture. Its headquarters are a centre for contemporary sculpture on Old Brompton Road, South Kensington, London. It is the oldest and largest organisation dedicated to sculpture in the UK. Until 2017, it was the Royal British Society of Sculptors.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Nathan Coley</span> British artist

Nathan Coley is a contemporary British artist who was shortlisted for the Turner Prize in 2007 and has held both solo and group exhibitions internationally, as well as his work being owned by both private and public collections worldwide. He studied Fine Art at Glasgow School of Art between 1985 and 1989 with the artists Christine Borland, Ross Sinclair and Douglas Gordon amongst others.

Louise Hopkins is a British contemporary artist and painter who lives and works in Glasgow, Scotland.

Semiconductor is UK artist duo Ruth Jarman and Joe Gerhardt. They have been working together for over twenty years producing visually and intellectually engaging moving image works which explore the material nature of our world and how we experience it through the lens of science and technology, questioning how these devices mediate our experiences. Their unique approach has won them many awards, commissions and prestigious fellowships including; SónarPLANTA 2016 commission, Collide @ CERN Ars Electronica Award 2015, Jerwood Open Forest 2015 and Samsung Art + Prize 2012. Exhibitions and screenings include; The Universe and Art, Mori Art Museum, Tokyo, Japan, 2016; Infosphere, ZKM, Karlsruhe, 2016; Quantum of Disorder, Museum Haus Konstruktiv, Zurich, 2015; Da Vinci: Shaping the Future, ArtScience Museum, Singapore, 2014; Let There Be Light, House of Electronic Arts, Basel 2013 ; Field Conditions, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, 2012; International Film Festival Rotterdam, 2012; New York Film Festival: Views from the Avant Garde, 2012; European Media Art Festival, 2012; Worlds in the Making, FACT, Liverpool 2011 ; Earth; Art of a Changing World, Royal Academy of Arts, London, 2009 and Sundance Film Festival, 2009.

Elpida Hadzi-Vasileva is a Macedonian- born artist [1] based in Brighton, UK. She has exhibited extensively and realised numerous commissions nationally and internationally, in gallery spaces, museums and within the public realm. Hadzi-Vasileva was selected by the Ministry of Culture to represent Macedonia at the 55th Venice Biennale in 2013, with her work Silentio Pathologia, with Ana Frangovska, curator at the National Gallery of Macedonia. [2] Hadzi-Vasileva was commissioned by the Vatican for the Pavilion of the Holy See, at the 56th International Art Exhibition Venice Biennale in 2015, with her work Haruspex. Hadzi-Vasileva attended the Royal College of Art, London and the Glasgow School of Art, Glasgow, Scotland. [1]

<span class="mw-page-title-main">James Hawkins (artist)</span> English painter

James Allan Hawkins is an English painter and film maker associated with Scottish Highland landscape. He lives, works and exhibits at his open studio RhueArt in Rhue, three miles North of Ullapool.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Graham Fagen</span> Scottish artist

Graham Fagen is a Scottish artist living and working in Glasgow, Scotland. He has exhibited internationally at the Busan Biennale, South Korea (2004), the Art and Industry Biennial, New Zealand (2004), the Venice Biennale (2003) and represented Scotland at the 56th Venice Biennale in 2015 in a presentation curated and organised by Hospitalfield. In Britain he has exhibited at the Victoria & Albert Museum, Tate Britain and the Institute of Contemporary Arts, London. In 1999 he was invited by the Imperial War Museum, London to work as the Official War Artist for Kosovo.

Will Maclean MBE is a Scottish artist and professor of art. Born in Inverness in 1941, he was a midshipman on HMS Conway at Anglesey in Wales before attending Gray's School of Art, Aberdeen (1961–65) and then the British School at Rome (1966) as part of a year on a Scottish Education Department Travelling Scholarship. He was an art teacher in Fife schools and taught pupils at Bell Baxter High School in Cupar between 1969 and 1979.

Claire Barclay is a Scottish artist. Her artistic practice uses a number of traditional media that include installation, sculpture and printmaking, but it also expands to encapsulate a diverse array of craft techniques. Central to her practice is a sustained exploration of materials and space.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Myfanwy Macleod</span> Canadian artist (born 1961)

Myfanwy MacLeod is a Canadian artist who lives, and works, in Vancouver, British Columbia. She has exhibited work in Canada, the United States of America, and Europe. MacLeod received an award from La Fondation André Piolat (1995), and a VIVA award from the Doris and Jack Shadbolt Foundation (1999). She has work in public, and private collections, including at the National Art Gallery of Canada, and the Vancouver Art Gallery.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ross Sinclair (artist)</span> Scottish visual artist, musician and writer

Professor Ross Sinclair is a Scottish visual artist, musician and writer. He lives and works in Kilcreggan, Argyll and is currently Reader in Contemporary Art Practice at The Glasgow School of Art, whilst also maintaining his professional practice. Sinclair was one of the key figures in the movement of contemporary artists in Glasgow in the 1990s, dubbed the 'Glasgow Miracle' by art curator and critic Hans-Ulrich Obrist.

Victoria Morton is a Scottish contemporary visual artist who works in paint, sculpture and installation.

Moyna Flannigan is a Scottish artist working primarily in drawing, collage and painting.

Clara Ursitti is a Canadian-Italian artist based in Glasgow, Scotland. She was born in North Bay, Ontario in 1968.

Beagles & Ramsay are an art duo based in Glasgow, Scotland. They have worked collaboratively since 1997.

Tania Kovats is an English visual artist, best known for her sculpture, installation art and drawing.

Alberta Whittle is a Barbadian-Scottish multidisciplinary artist who works across media: film, sculpture, print, installation and performance. She lives and works in Glasgow. She was the winner of the Margaret Tait Award in 2018, winner of the Frieze Artist Award in 2020, received a Turner Prize bursary, also in 2020, and represented Scotland at the 59th International Art Exhibition – La Biennale di Venezia in 2022.