Simon Bedwell (born 1963 in
Croydon,
Surrey
Surrey () is a ceremonial and non-metropolitan county in South East England, bordering Greater London to the south west. Surrey has a large rural area, and several significant urban areas which form part of the Greater London Built-up Area. ...
) is an English artist based in
London.
Bedwell has shown work internationally in many exhibitions including solo shows ''The Furnishers'' at
White Columns
White Columns is New York City’s oldest alternative non-profit art space. White Columns is known as a showcase for up-and-coming artists, and is primarily devoted to emerging artists who are not affiliated with galleries. All work submitted is ...
in
New York City, ''Galleon and Other Stories'' at the
Saatchi Gallery in London, ''England Their England'' at Laden fur Nichts in
Leipzig, ''
Beck's Futures
Beck's Futures was a British art prize founded by London's Institute of Contemporary Arts and sponsored by Beck's beer given to contemporary artists.
Prior to the establishment of the prize in 2000, Beck's had sponsored several exhibitions of ...
2004'' at the
ICA in London and the CCA in
Glasgow, Cell Project Space, London, 2004, Studio Voltaire London, 2009, Piper Keys, London and Hospitalfield House, Arbroath in 2017.
Career
Simon Bedwell spent most of his art career as a member of the London-based collective
BANK.
''Art in America'' review of BANK, February 1999.
/ref> BANK also included Dino Demosthenous, David Burrows, John Russell, Milly Thompson and Andrew Williamson – who, throughout the 1990s and up until 2003, were a consistent presence on the London art-scene. BANK regularly hosted shows in their warehouse space that combined the work of the group with that of other artists in schizophrenic installations where it was often impossible to tell where one work ended and another began. The group also regularly produced art-world-baiting material in the form of satirical exhibition invitations, provocative show titles, a tabloid ridiculing the excesses of the London scene and a campaign to improve gallery press releases that involved returning said documents to galleries with corrections to grammar and tips for improvement.
Following the group’s split he became a successful artist in his own right.
In 2011 Bedwell began concentrating on ceramic sculpture.
Throughout July 2011 he curated The Hole, a series of 5 'long weekend' exhibitions in a newly built space off Walworth Road, London, featuring new work from Katrina Palmer, Lucy Clout, Phillip Lai, Tom Benson, Alice Channer
Alice Channer (born 1977) is a British sculptor based in London. Known for her sculptures and mixed media works that explore our relationship to objects, Channer uses materials ranging from metal and concrete to textiles and paper.
Early life an ...
, Leah Capaldi and Claire Carter, alongside work from Merve Kaptan and Laure Prouvost and others, in configurations changing daily and all featuring performances. Photography and film was banned, and each weekend had its own numbered publication.
Art
His most widely known works combine second-hand posters with carefully selected slogans produced using WordArt, stencils and spray paint. This strand of Bedwell’s practice is typical of his methods; the juxtaposition of found imagery with purpose built text creates an often funny, politically apposite, yet highly convincing brand-new object. His work functions via a critique of advertising, logoism, signs and signifiers; picking holes in means of representation favoured by the mass media to discover the limits of tolerance and relevance of ‘rebellious’ acts, and believability, within a given context.
Following his solo exhibition ''Gents: A Melodrama with 2 Acts'' at Platform, London in 2005, Bedwell's work featured a mix of more complicated subject matter and concerns. As Matthew Higgs wrote for Bedwell press release for 2007's White Columns show, 'In his works Bedwell often collides conflicting aesthetics and visual languages, which variously include soft-porn imagery, the popular gothic (often in the form of horror movie posters), institutional and bureaucratic architecture(s), advertising, modernist painting, and sardonic sloganeering. Seen together, Bedwell’s works establish a complex narrative that both engages with and confuses contemporary political and social mores. His work conflates and disrupts issues of class, race, sexual politics and art'.
References
External links
Simon Bedwell at ArtFacts.Net
{{DEFAULTSORT:Bedwell, Simon
English artists
Living people
1963 births
Artists from Croydon