Scarborough Art Gallery Autumn / Winter 2021
3D Virtual Exhibitions
Scarborough Art Gallery
The Crescent, Scarborough YO11 2PW
Feral Practice: The Ant-ic Museum
How might an exhibition be guided by ants?
Humans have forgotten how much we owe to the ants, who were the great innovators of complex societies like our own, and once our greatest teachers. Many contemporary humans look at ants, if they look at them at all, with an unquestioning sense of intellectual and moral superiority, seeing ants as interchangeable, unthinking, machine-like. If ants are represented in museums at all, it is usually as pinned exhibits in natural history collections, rather than as producers of complex cultures. To address this, Feral Practice invited a community of wood ants to work on this exhibition as co-curators and guides. Together, they explore some of the complex histories and earthly wisdom that ants have brought to humans over the millennia.
The Ant-ic Museum utilises materials, forms and themes influenced by the perceptual and semiotic priorities of ants. Three new sculptures bring the domed shape of the wood ant nest into dialogue with human architectural forms – the ziggurat, the stupa, the geodesic dome. Audio and video works embedded in these sculptures offer intimate views of the wood ants’ world.
The exhibition publication is shaped around an interview between Feral Practice and the Broxa Forest Sisterhood of the North York Moors.
Feral Practice has been researching and working with ants since 2014. Thanks to Stour Valley Creative Partnership, and to Stour Valley Arts before them, who supported Feral Practice – over many years and residencies – to engage deeply with the wood ant sisterhood of Kings Wood in Kent. Thanks also to Forestry England, who supported a residency at Dalby in May 2021, enabling our work with the wood ant population of Broxa Forest.
Find out more: scarboroughmuseumstrust.com
From 2nd October 2021 to 30th January 2022
John Atkinson Grimshaw
Five recently cleaned and conserved paintings by John Atkinson Grimshaw (1836-1893), a Leeds born artist best known for his nocturnal and urban landscapes. The conservation of the paintings have been generously funded by the former Friends of Scarborough Museums and will go on display in the newly named ‘Friends Gallery’ at Scarborough Art Gallery. Throughout the exhibition, the curatorial team will aim to use the paintings as research tools to examine a range of ideas related to history, culture and science, which we will share with our audiences through a changing programme of interpretation.
Find out more: scarboroughmuseumstrust.com
From 2nd October 2021 to 1st October 2023