Exhibitions 2001
  • Dawn Mellor

    Madame X and the Party Tricks 23 November – 21 December 2001 London Gallery I For this exhibition Dawn Mellor has invented a female figure loosely based on the legend of Faust – a homosexual, lewd, drunken and blasphemous magician, who was obsessed with fame and able to conjure up and communicate with the devil.
  • Lars Nilsson

    The House Angel 22 November – 21 December 2001 London Gallery I For over a decade Nilsson’s art has been largely centered around his own body, be it a matter of its conspicuous absence or by exposing it to the extreme.
  • Abigail Lane

    Tomorrows World, Yesterdays Fever (Mental Guests Incorporated) 4 October – 10 November 2001 London Gallery I Tomorrows World, Yesterdays Fever (Mental Guests Incorporated) extends Abigail Lane's preoccupation with the fantastical, the Gothic and the uncanny through a trio of arresting and theatrical installations which are based around film projections.
  • Works on Paper: (From Acconci to Zittel)

    27 June – 15 September 2001 London Gallery I Giovanni Anselmo, Alex Katz, Lisa Yuskavage, Vito Acconci, Henry Moore, Dawn Mellor, Nicolas de Stael, Cecily Brown, Karen Kilimnik, Sue Williams, Inka Essenhigh, Rosemarie Trockel, John Currin, David Hockney David Smith, Paul Klee, Verne Dawson, Sonia Delaunay-Terk, Stephen Willats, Terry Winters, Ernesto Neto, Peter Lanyon, Chantal Joffe, Alighiero E Boetti, Chris Ofili, Udomsak Krisanamis, Lazar el Lissitsky, Fiona Banner, Glenn Ligon, Kasimir Malevich, Tal R, Dinos and Jake Chapman, Anne Chu, Peter Doig, Tim Gardner, Stanley Brouwn, Takashi Murakami, Yayoi Kusama, Man Ray, Keir Smith, Sol Lewitt, Wayne Gonzales, Christo, William Kentridge, David Harrison, Nen Nicholson, Richard Long, Martin Creed, Abigail Lane, Richard Tuttle, Carl Andre, Andrea Zittel, Robin Lowe, Raymond Pettibone, Gerwald Rochenschaub.
  • Anne Chu

    22 May – 23 June 2001 London Gallery I Using a variety of media including wood, bronze, urethane and ceramic, Anne Chu incorporates painting into unexpected materials, exploring established artistic conventions of the East and West and drawing from various art making traditions.
  • Udomsak Krisanamis

    22 May – 23 June 2001 London Gallery I Thai born, New York based artist Udomsak Krisanamis is best known for his richly textured collaged paintings which reflect his highly personalised approach to language.
  • Hiroko Nakao

    Hiroko Nakao

    22 May – 23 June 2001 London Gallery I This exhibition presents Nakao’s elaborately layered, collaged paintings, which incorporate fabric, stitching, lace and stickers as well as motifs such as butterflies and doll like figures.
  • Tracey Moffatt

    Invocations 28 March – 12 May 2001 London Gallery I Invocations is a return to the large scale format and rich colour of Tracey Moffatt's earlier classic work, Something More.
  • Annika von Hausswolff

    Spöke 28 March – 12 May 2001 London Gallery I Spöke (Ghost) 2000, consists of five colour photographs of a nearly empty house as well as an installation of every day objects - chairs, fire extinguishers, a carpet, a pot plant. Until recently von Hausswolff's work has reflected the human body, more often than not expressing signs of damage and...
  • Alex Hartley: Case Studies

    Alex Hartley: Case Studies

    28 March – 12 May 2001 London Gallery I Alex Hartley is primarily known for his glass encased photographs of gallery spaces, tower blocks and fictional architectural constructions. In this exhibition he pursues his dialogue with iconic modernist architecture. The centre piece of the exhibition is Case Study , which is Hartley's most ambitious work to date. This monumental... Learn More
  • Painting 2001 Group Exhibition

    Painting 2001

    Group Exhibition 1 February – 17 March 2001 London Gallery I Verne Dawson, Mari Eastman, Steve Mumford, Kori Newkirk, Tal R, Daniel Richter
  • Gerwald Rockenschaub

    28 November 2000 – 20 January 2001 London Gallery I Rockenschaub presents a monumental inflated object made of translucent PVC foil pieces welded together and filled with air.
  • Thomas Demand

    28 November 2000 – 20 January 2001 London Gallery I Known for his immaculate photographs of environments elaborately constructed out of cardboard and paper, Thomas Demand continues to draw on source material from historical, political and media images.