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The Turner Prize will be presented at the Ferens Art Gallery in Hull for the first time, with an exhibition of work by this year's shortlisted artists: Hurvin Anderson, Andrea Büttner, Lubaina Himid and Rosalind Nashashibi.
Read MoreGiven a choice between a well-ordered exhibition with a soft center, like this year’s Venice Biennale, or a messy one with some hard, fibrous edges, I’ll go for edges any day, which is why, despite some gripes,
Read MoreTurner Contemporary, built on site of boarding house artist visited when painting there, announced as exhibition venue The Turner Contemporary art
Read MoreHurvin Anderson, Andrea Büttner, Lubaina Himid, and Rosalind Nashashibi have been shortlisted for the 2017 Turner Prize.
Read MoreThe Turner Prize 2017 shortlist has just been announced at Tate Britain.
Read MoreOpening on 18 May, Photo London is one of the world’s leading photography fairs. Co-Founder Michael Benson came to MutualArt’s new Private Exhibition Space to share his tips on collecting
Read MoreThe Turner Prize is no longer the preserve of the Young British Artist, with everyone on the 2017 shortlist aged over 40 - and the oldest aged 62.
Read MoreThe prestigious British Turner Prize has announced its shortlist and German artist Andrea Büttner is among the four finalists.
Read MoreHurvin Anderson, Lubaina Himid, Andrea Büttner and Rosalind Nashashibi are in the running for coveted award
Read MoreFrom a dramatic portrait by Douglas Gordon to works by Turner Prize nominee Rosalind Nashashibi, we take a closer look at works offered in Acts of Appearance — the first show in our Private Exhibition Space in London.
Read MoreOne of Britain's leading black female artists, Lubaina Himid, has become the oldest person to be nominated for British art's most high-profile award.
Read MoreFor the first in a series of our editors’ initial impressions from documenta 14 Athens, Pablo Larios takes a look at the ASFA.
Read More10 Exhibitions Opening This Week
Read MoreEver-regenerating discussions in mainstream documentary discourse pit form in opposition to function.
Read MoreBritain’s Tate has revealed highlights of its 2016 exhibition program, announcing major exhibitions devoted to some of the most important artists of the 20th century including Francis Bacon, Georgia O’Keefe, Robert Rauschenberg, and Paul Nash.
Read MoreKarla Black’s Story of a Sensible Length, 2014 at the Scottish National Gallery, ‘a Tiepolo dream made real’. Photograph: Edinburgh art festival
Read MoreThe Registry of Promise is a series of exhibitions that reflect on our increasingly fraught relationship with what the future may or may not hold in store for us. These exhibitions engage and play upon the various readings
Read MoreSince the 1980s, a number of contemporary artists working in photography, film, and video have taken as their subject the art museum and how we view
Read MoreThe face is nothing less than the basis for all of human morality, according to French philosopher Emmanuel Levinas, cited by Toke Lykkeberg, Candice
Read MoreSpring Art Calendar Everything Happening in Art This Season.
Read More‘At first I thought it was about food. Fussy politics or lint cake baked in Greek week. We are all in greet week, are we not? Goods baked in no goods.
Read MoreThe annual Glasgow International art festival features a host of fêted prizewinners, but few have real star quality
Read MoreBloomberg New Contemporaries returns to the ICA for the third year running.
Read MoreThe Glasgow International Festival of Visual Art, Yoko Ono and a welcome re-evaluation of Edvard Munch
Read MoreOPENING on the news that Glasgow International director Katrina Brown’s last edition in 2010 has been nominated for a prestigious inaugural
Read MoreParadoxically, exhibiting artists that rage against the institution within the institution is both non-ironic and particularly vogue.
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Rosalind Nashashibi (b. 1973 Croydon, United Kingdom) lives and works in London. Primarily using Super 8 and 16mm film, Nashashibi also creates prints and photographs. Her early non-narrative films reflected upon the documentary mode, capturing fleeting moments from the everyday. Their bleached and gritty treatment made it difficult to situate the films’ subjects in time and space despite their invariably local quality. Nashashibi’s more recent works have become increasingly cinematographic in character, investigating rituals, transformation and staging. Her scrupulous attention to ordinary details and human life has allowed her to evolve a subjective repertoire of motifs and figures that reappear throughout her practice. Nashashibi also produces work in collaboration with artist Lucy Skaer as Nashashibi/Skaer.
Rosalind Nashashibi has recently presented exhibitions at Documenta 14, Athens (2017), 2016 On This Island by Rosalind Nashashibi, UCI School of arts, Irvine, CA, USA (2015), Tulips and Roses, Brussels (2010), ICA – Institute of Contemporary Art, London (2009), Projects in Art and Theory, Cologne (2009), Stuttgart Kunstlerhaus, Stuttgart (2009), Presentation House, Vancouver (2008) and Professional Gallery, OCAD, Toronto (2008). She was one of the six artists representing Scotland at the 52nd Venice Biennale (2007), and her work has been included in “Heaven”, the 2nd Athens Biennial, Athens (2009)*, “The Greenroom” at the Hessel Museum and The Center for Curatorial Studies at Bard College, New York (2008)*, Manifesta 7, Trento (2008), the Nordic Biennial of Contemporary Art, Moss, Norway (2006) and “Zenomap”, the Scottish Pavillion for the 50th Venice Biennale, Venice (2003). She was awarded the Beck's Futures Art Prize at ICA – Institute of Contemporary Art, London in 2003. *As Nashashibi/Skaer
Nashashibi was nominated for the Turner Prize (2017)
Rosalind Nashashibi is represented by Murray Guy
For additional information about this artist, visit Mutual Art