I will be participating in the 40th Anniversary edition of the annual Small is Beautiful exhibition, which will take place at Flowers Gallery, New York for the first time this year. The show challenges contemporary artists working in all media to produce works with a fixed economy of scale, each piece measuring no larger than 9 x 7 inches. On display will be over 140 works by an international roster of gallery artists and invited guests.

NOVEMBER 20, 2014 – JANUARY 10, 2015

OPENING RECEPTION THURSDAY NOVEMBER 20, 6-8PM

 

As part of Photo Shanghai, Flowers Gallery will be showing prints from Pierdom alongside work by Boomoon, Edward Burtynsky, Nadav Kander and Jason Larkin.

Stand C02

Photo Shanghai is the first international art fair dedicated to photography in China.

5-7 September 2014

 

Full details of Art14 fair can be found on their website here.

Art14_2

Image: Rivers of Flowers, 2013 from the series Italian Views © Simon Roberts

Flowers are delighted to announce that the annual Small is Beautiful exhibition, which has run for more than thirty years, will take place at their larger Kingsland Road gallery this year. Consequently it is the gallery’s most extensive yet, with over 170 artists submitting works.

The works, which must be no bigger than a tiny 9 by 7 inches / 22 by 17cm in size, are the creations of many well-known
artists, set alongside emerging artists and selected recent graduates. Established artists participating are, amongst
others; Anthony Frost, Maggi Hambling, Nicola Hicks, Patrick Hughes, Nadav Kander, Tom Phillips and Bryan Kneale.
Confined only by scale, with a theme to inspire them rather than dictate the final form of their submitted artworks,
many of the artists involved find this both a liberating and challenging exhibition, creating pieces utterly separate from
their normal practices.
I have a piece from a new series I’m working on based around original postcards sent from Italy (above). You can view all the work in the show here.

My second solo exhibition at Flowers Gallery in London will be Pierdom, opening on 10th September. An associated book, published by Dewi Lewis Publishing, will be launched on the same night.

For more details, visit http://www.flowersgallery.com/exhibitions/flowers/2013/simon-roberts-pierdom

British photographer Simon Roberts has spent the past three years creating Pierdom, a comprehensive survey of Britain’s piers. Predominantly constructed during the 19th Century in the context of expanding Victorian seaside resorts and railways, these structures were often erected as landing docks for pleasure steamers and other sea craft. Growing to accommodate the needs of day-trippers escaping the smog of the city, engineers began to incorporate bandstands, cafes and music halls into their designs, embracing the growing notion of ‘pleasure seeking’ by the seaside.

Pierdom addresses the historical significance of these architectural structures placed in comparison with their modern interpretation and functionality. Roberts’ photographs of ruinous piers such as Birnbeck Pier (2012) are in contrast with those such as Ryde Pier (2012) in which the local community and everyday usage of the landscape is represented by a skate boarding park which dominates the composition. It is this socio-cultural element of the landscape that has sustained Roberts’ interest, revealing a deep fascination with the way humans interact with their environment, and in eccentric British pastimes.

At the turn of the century the British coastline boasted over 100 piers, some modest and functional, others elegant, exotic Victorian structures thrusting out into the sea. Now under half remain, the others destroyed by fierce weather and fires, with many dismantled during the 2nd World War to prevent German landings. Britain’s piers have become cultural landmarks, tracing history, national identity and economic fortunes from Victorian industrialism to the post-war boom, and finally now to the recent economic downturn.

Roberts’ large format photographs are taken with great technical precision, often from elevated positions encorporating peripheral details and the elements, thus enriching the viewing experience of each print. Through formal devices associated with the picturesque; perspective, asymmetry and juxtaposition, the photographs engage us with contemporary issues about our uneasy and fragile relationship to both nature, and our urban environments.The series is at once factual yet warm, a broad architectural and anthropological study of our coastline as a microcosm of British society.

Art, Election & History – An artist talk and reception with Nicola Green & Simon Roberts

What is the role of the artist in the portrayal of political events?

Please join Flowers Gallery for a private reception and artist talk with Nicola Green and Simon Roberts on 26th March 2013, as part of the current exhibition Nicola Green: In Seven Days… / Simon Roberts: The Election Project which continues until 13th April.

Drinks will be served from 6pm.

The artists will be in conversation from 7pm.

Please RSVP to [email protected]

Photograph: Nigel Farage, UK Independence Party, Buckingham, 5th May 2010 © Simon Roberts, from The Election Project

After UKIP’s surge in the polls in the Eastleigh byelection this week, Andrew Rawnsley writes in today’s Observer “Nigel Farage is the ebullient face on a rackety gang which attracts some very strange characters and is riddled with faction-fighting. Its policy prospectus would be torn to shreds if anything like it was ever offered by any of the main parties. Ukip’s literature in Eastleigh promised tax cuts for “everyone” and more spending on everything from the restoration of student grants to more generous pensions to more prisons. It must be the only party to be led by people who still believe in Santa Claus.”

My Election Project series can currently be seen on the wall at Flowers Gallery in London.

Art13 London is the capital’s new art fair for Modern and Contemporary art, presenting a truly global perspective and showcasing art from 1945 to the present day. The first edition will showcase over 120 leading galleries from 30 different countries and here you will find over a thousand paintings, sculptures, multi-media installations and a special focus on prints and editions as well as photography.

Flowers Gallery will be exhibiting a selection of my work on stand B4.

The inaugural Fair will take place at Olympia Grand Hall in West London from 1-3 March 2013 (VIP day: 28 February 2013).

Olympia Grand Hall
Hammersmith Road
Kensington
London W14 8UX

For visitor enquiries please contact:
[email protected]

You can view a catalogue online here.

My print ‘Leeds City Council, 23rd February 2011’ from Star Chambers nestled between work by David Spero and Andy Goldsworthy in the Uncommon Ground exhibition at Flowers Gallery. On show until 1 September.

Uncommon Ground is the title of Flowers Gallery’s summer show, curated by Chris Littlewood, and is an exploration of environmental interventions in contemporary photography.

“Inspired by the work of Keith Arnatt and Gabriel Orozco, this exhibition aims to obscure the intersection between photographs of observed reality and artistically altered reality. Here, environment is taken in its broadest sense: natural ecosystems, urban and suburban space, domestic interiors, industrial landscapes and even political arenas.

Work by the following artists will be on show- PETER AINSWORTH, EDWARD BURTYNSKY, CHRIS ENGMAN, ANDREA GALVANI, ANDY GOLDSWORTHY, SCARLETT HOOFT GRAAFLAND, NADAV KANDER, JASON LARKIN, ALASTAIR LEVY, JAEHYO LEE, TOM LOVELACE, JOHN MACLEAN, ROBERT POLIDORI, SIMON ROBERTS, AARON SCHUMAN and DAVID SPERO.

More information available to download here.

Image above Higgs Ocean #12, 2010 © Andrea Galvani