Judith Goddard

Last updated

Judith Goddard
Born1956
Known for Video art

Judith Goddard (born 1956) is a British video artist. She has lived in London since 1980. Her works include single channel works, [1] large-scale installation, photography, print and drawing.

Initially working with 16mm film installation and stills, Goddard began making videos in 1982 and is associated with the second wave of video art in the United Kingdom. Works include the three-screen video The Garden of Earthly Delights (1991) which presents a fragmented, dystopian view of life in the 1990s in the spirit of Hieronymus Bosch. [2]

Exhibitions

Recent exhibitions and screenings include Rewind, Tate Modern, (2012); Rewind & Play, Light Box, Tate Britain, London (2010); The Undistributed Middle, South London Gallery (2012); 12 Shooters - An Esoteric Afternoon, South London Gallery (2007); Upside Down/Inside Out: ‘Helen's Room’, Kettle's Yard, Cambridge (2009); [3] AV 08 Newcastle (2008); Analogue. Pioneering Artists’ Video from the UK, Canada and Poland (1968–88), Tate Britain, London (2006); Mobile, Espace Landowski, Boulogne-Billancourt (2006); Cross Town Traffic, Apee Jay Media Gallery, New Delhi (2005);Tourism, online at Tank TV (2005); Wonderings, 47 Great Eastern Street, London (2005); Collage, Bloomberg Space, London (2004) and 100 Years of Artists Film and Video, Tate Britain, London (2004). [2]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bruce Nauman</span> American sculptor and performance artist

Bruce Nauman is an American artist. His practice spans a broad range of media including sculpture, photography, neon, video, drawing, printmaking, and performance. Nauman lives near Galisteo, New Mexico.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Victor Burgin</span> British artist and writer

Victor Burgin is a British artist and writer. Burgin first came to attention as a conceptual artist in the late 1960s and at that time was most noted for being a political photographer of the left, who would fuse photographs and words in the same picture. He has worked with photography and film, calling painting "the anachronistic daubing of woven fabrics with coloured mud". His work is influenced by a variety of theorists and philosophers, most especially thinkers such as Sigmund Freud, Henri Lefebvre, André Breton, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Michel Foucault and Roland Barthes.

Carey Young is a visual artist whose work is often inspired by law, politics and economics. The tools, language and architectures of these fields act as material for her videos, text works, performances and photographs, often developing from the professional cultures she explores. In her early video works, she donned attire appropriate to the business and legal worlds, enacting scenarios which examine and question each institution's power to shape society and individual identity. Since 2002, Young developed a large body of work addressing and critiquing law in relation to ideas of site, gender and performance. Young teaches at the Slade School of Fine Art in London where she is an Associate Professor in Fine Art.

Harold Stanley Ede, also known as Jim Ede, was a British collector of art and friend to artists.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">David Hall (video artist)</span> English artist

David Hall was an English artist, whose pioneering work contributed much to establishing video as an art form.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Darren Almond</span> English artist

Darren James Almond is an English artist, based in London. He was nominated for the 2005 Turner Prize.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Winifred Nicholson</span> British painter (1893–1981)

Rosa Winifred Nicholson was a British painter. She was married to the painter Ben Nicholson, and was thus the daughter-in-law of the painter William Nicholson and his wife, the painter Mabel Pryde. She was the mother of the painter Kate Nicholson.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dhruva Mistry</span> Indian sculptor (born 1957)

Dhruva Mistry is an Indian sculptor.

Zarina Bhimji is a Ugandan Indian photographer, based in London. She was nominated for the Turner Prize in 2007, exhibited at Documenta 11 in 2002, and is represented in the public collections of Tate, the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago and Moderna Museet in Stockholm.

Anthony Howell is an English poet, novelist and performance artist. He was a founder of the performance company The Theatre of Mistakes, in the 1970s and 1980s.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Susan Hiller</span> American/British conceptual artist

Susan Hiller was a US-born, British conceptual artist who lived in London, United Kingdom. Her practice spanned a broad range of media including installation, video, photography, painting, sculpture, performance, artist's books and writing. A key figure in British art across four decades, she was best known for her innovative large-scale multimedia installations, and for works that took as their subject matter aspects of culture that were overlooked, marginalised, or disregarded, including paranormal beliefs – an approach which she referred to as 'paraconceptualism'.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ian McKeever (artist)</span> British artist

Ian McKeever is a contemporary British artist. Since 1990 McKeever has lived and worked in Hartgrove, Dorset, England.

Dryden Goodwin based in London, is a British artist known for his intricate drawings, often in combination with photography and live action video; he creates films, gallery installations, projects in public space, etchings, works on-line and soundtracks.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Stephen Partridge</span> English artist

Stephen Partridge is an English video artist who studied under David Hall and his career as an artist, academic and researcher, helped to establish video as an art form in the UK.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Chris Meigh-Andrews</span>

Chris Meigh-Andrews is a video artist, writer and curator from Essex, England, whose work often includes elements of renewable energy technology in tandem with moving image and sound. He is currently Professor Emeritus in Electronic & Digital Art at the University of Central Lancashire and Visiting Professor at the Centre for Moving image Research (CMIR) at the University of the West of England.

Marion Kalmus is a British Artist who produced work between 1993 and 2002. After a first profession as a fresco restorer, Kalmus studied Fine Art at Goldsmiths, University of London. Whilst still a student she was commissioned to make a work at the Royal Festival Hall, London She won the Nicholas and Andre Tooth Scholarship and used the prize to film her work Deserter which was shown at the Tate Liverpool 1995.

Sutapa Biswas is a British Indian conceptual artist, who works across a range of media including painting, drawing, film and time-based media.

Nina Pope is an artist that works with public art, installation, film making, and internet publishing that lives and works in London. Most of her work is done in collaboration with Karen Guthrie. Pope and Guthrie started working together as a collaborative duo in 1995 on projects that "enrich and inform public life"and they founded creative non-profit Somewhere in 2001.

Karen Guthrie is a British artist that works with public art, installation, film making, and internet publishing. She lives and works in the Lake District, UK. Most of her work is done in collaboration with Nina Pope. Guthrie and Pope started working together in London as a collaborative duo in 1995 on projects that "enrich and inform public life" and they founded creative non-profit Somewhere in 2001.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Judith Cowan (sculptor)</span> British artist

Judith Cowan is a British artist who lives in London. She works in sculpture, installation, photography, and film.

References

  1. Meigh-Andrews, Chris (7 November 2013). A History of Video Art. A&C Black. ISBN   9780857851888.
  2. 1 2 "Judith Goddard website". Judith Goddard. Retrieved 6 March 2015.
  3. Allsop, Douglas (2009). Upside down/inside out. Cambridge: Kettle's Yard. ISBN   9781904561347.