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Traces of Humanity


Self and Other Irritant, 2017, mosquito-based watercolour, on two sheets of Hahnemuhle Leonardo paper, 58 x 143 cm   and     Sneeze: Sternutation Circumstances, 2016, pollen-based watercolour, on two sheets of Hahnemuhle Leonardo paper, 58 x 140 cm
Self and Other Irritant, 2017, mosquito-based watercolour, on two sheets of Hahnemuhle Leonardo paper, 58 x 143 cm and Sneeze: Sternutation Circumstances, 2016, pollen-based watercolour, on two sheets of Hahnemuhle Leonardo paper, 58 x 140 cm

TRACES OF HUMANITY

at

Gustavo Bacarisas Gallery, Gibraltar


1st - 31st July 2026. 10.30 am - 6.30 pm  


I am pleased to be in this exhibition, Traces of Humanity


A major landmark exhibition organised by Gibraltar Cultural Services, on behalf of the Ministry of Culture, will see artists from Gibraltar, and world-renowned artists exhibiting both in the United Kingdom and in Gibraltar.

 

This unique project, entitled ‘Traces of Humanity’, will feature various events in Margate during the month of May; a major exhibition at Noho Studios, London, from the 19th to 29th May; and concludes in Gibraltar from 1st to 31st July at Gustavo Bacarisas Gallery.

 

The theme, set by curator Philippa Beale, celebrates the Gorham’s Cave Complex, a UNESCO World Heritage Site of global importance in understanding human evolution. The exhibition will pay tribute to the traces left by humanity, reflecting on self-knowledge, history, and the everyday aspects of human existence.




See more work at: www.andrewcarnie.uk


Andrew Carnie is an artist and academic at Winchester School of Art, Southampton University. His practice often involves a meaningful interaction with scientists. He is part of the Critical Practices Research team, where his interests lie in exploring the self through the lens of hybridity, as well as in organ transplantation and immunology. Other themes and ideas are often based on neurology, the brain, and how we get a sense of ourselves through scientific ideas and images. The work is often time-based, employing slide-dissolve systems or video projection onto complex screens. In darkened spaces, layered images appear and disappear on suspended voiles, the developing display absorbing the viewer into an expanded sense of space and time through slowly unfolding narratives that evolve around them. His work has been exhibited at the Science Museum, London, Natural History Museum, Rotterdam, Design Museum, Zurich, Exit Art, in New York, Williams College Museum of Art, Williamstown, Great North Museum, Newcastle, Pera Museum, Istanbul, Dresden Hygiene Museum, Morevska Gallery, Brno, and the Daejeon Museum of Art, South Korea amongst many others, most recently the Hatton Gallery and Vane, Newcastle.


Hear about the work at


Read about the work at Catalogue. 


See more work at the website: http://www.tram.ndo.co.uk/artworks.htm 




Current exhibitions and projects: http://andrewcarnieexhibtionsandstuff.blogspot.com/ 


All images: courtesy of the artist Andrew Carnie   


Andrew Carnie  Artist: Art: Art Work: Science: Art and Science: Science and Art: SciArt: Art Science: Drawing: Print: Photography: Installation: Video Art: Paint: Painting: Oil Pa

 
 
 

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