Alex Frost (artist)

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Alex Frost
Born
Alexis Frost

NationalityEnglish
EducationGlasgow School of Art, Staffordshire University
Known forSculpture, Drawing

Alex Frost is a British contemporary artist, exhibiting internationally.

Background[]

Alex Frost currently lives and works in London.

Exhibitions[]

Frost's often humorous work addresses the fluid boundaries between public and private space, the virtual and physical, the temporal and permanent. He is best known for his large mosaic sculptures that depict product packaging and branding. These have been included in exhibitions at Dundee Contemporary Arts, Venice Biennale, Milton Keynes Gallery, Studio Voltaire and Frieze Sculpture Park.

His recent exhibition ‘The New Work’[1] referenced the flexible workplace, a place where work and life have lost their distinctions. The exhibition ‘captured’ items that were emblematic of the fluidity of the contemporary workplace. It featured supermarket-bought sandwiches encased in resin, hanging from lanyards, propped on computer stands, and dangling from mobiles. The exhibition, held in a storage unit in London's Hackney Wick, was closed to the public and only viewable online.

In 2018, he devised ‘Wet Unboxing’, a series of videos he uploaded onto YouTube.[2] In these videos he opened products underwater. The products were all symbolic of a super-mobile or ‘on the go’ lifestyle. Described on Vice Motherboard as ‘a proto-meme—a precious, terrifying embryo—of the next new trend’.[3]

Residencies[]

In 2015 he was Phynance Resident[4] at Flat Time House, London. His other residencies include Cove Park,[5] Scotland in 2014; The Walled Garden,[6] Glasgow in 2013; AIR Antwerpen,[7] Belgium in 2010; Glenfiddich Artist Residency,[8] Dufftown, Scotland in 2009; Artsway,[9] Hampshire in 2007; Spike Island, Bristol[10] in 2002 and Grizedale Arts,[11] Cumbria in 2000.

Collaborations[]

In addition to his independent art practice he has been involved in a number of artistic collaborations. Notably, the devising and running of the artist-run radio station Radiotuesday (1998-2002)[12] with Duncan Campbell (artist) and Mark Vernon; Wave Rhythm by Louis Braille (2012)[13] with Stephen Livingstone from Errors (band), a limited edition flexi-disc single generated using a hybrid analogue/digital music and drawing machine and Flourish Nights (2001)[14] a season of screenings and performances organised with the artists Lucy McKenzie, Sophie Macpherson and Julian Kildear.

Collections[]

Frost's work is held in numerous private and public collections with his mosaic sculpture Adult (Ryvita/Crackerbread)(2007) in the collection of Glasgow Museums[15]

Notes and references[]

  1. ^ "Alex Frost The New Work". www.gh0stspace.uk. Retrieved 6 September 2018.
  2. ^ "Alex Frost". YouTube. Retrieved 6 September 2018.
  3. ^ "I Can't Stop Watching These Disgusting 'Wet Unboxing' Videos". Motherboard. 22 August 2018. Retrieved 6 September 2018.
  4. ^ "PHYNANCE RESIDENCY 2015 ARTIST ANNOUNCED | Projects | Flat Time House".
  5. ^ "Alex Frost « Cove Park".
  6. ^ "Bothy Project | A network of small-scale, off-grid art residency spaces in distinct and diverse locations around Scotland".
  7. ^ "Alex Frost | AIR Antwerpen".
  8. ^ "Arts and Business Scotland".
  9. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 19 April 2016. Retrieved 6 March 2016.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  10. ^ http://www.scottisharts.org.uk/1/artsinscotland/visualarts/features/featuresarchive/artistalexfrost.aspx
  11. ^ "Grizedale Arts: Opportunities: Volunteer Commission 2021".
  12. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 28 August 2016. Retrieved 6 March 2016.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  13. ^ "Parallel Worlds: Errors vs Alex Frost | the Skinny".
  14. ^ "Sorcha Dallas · Press · Alex Frost: Neil Mulholland, 'Aperto Scotland', Flash Art, 01/2002".
  15. ^ "Glasgow Museums Collections Online".

Further reading[]

  • Josephine Berry, Claire Louise Staunton, Property Guardian (Flat Time House, London), 2015.
  • Paul Becker, Future Spotters (Wewerka Pavilion, Muenster), 2013
  • Drawing Biennial 2013 (Drawing Room, London), 2013
  • AIR Traces, (AIR Antwerpen, Belgium), 2013
  • 100 Years, 100 Artists, 100 Works of Art, (Art On The Underground, London), 2012.
  • Soul Seekers: Interpreting the Icon (Trinity Museum, New York), 2012.
  • Industrial Aesthetics; Environmental Influences on Recent Art from Scotland (The Times Square Gallery, New York), 2011.
  • Drawn In (Travelling Gallery, Edinburgh), 2011.
  • Graham Domke, The Connoisseurs (Dundee Contemporary Arts, Dundee), 2010.
  • Artists at Glenfiddich 09, (The Glenfiddich Distillery, Dufftown, Scotland), 2010.
  • Finger Buffet (Travelling Gallery, Scotland), 2009.
  • Jerwood Sculpture Prize (Jerwood Visual Arts, London), 2009.
  • Artsway's New Forest Pavilion (Artsway, Sway), 2008.
  • Will Bradley, Supplements (Sorcha Dallas, Milton Keynes Gallery and Artsway), 2008.
  • Karla Black, 1973 (The Changing Room, Stirling), 2004.
  • Synth (Kunstraum B/2, Germany), 2004.
  • East International (Norwich Gallery, Norwich), 2003.
  • Karla Black, Alex Frost, An American Conversation (Cooper Gallery, DJCAD, Dundee), 2003.
  • Presence (The Fruitmarket gallery, Edinburgh).
  • Happy Outsiders from London and Scotland (Zacheta Panstwowa Gallery, Warsaw), 2002.
  • Hero (St Mary's Cathedral, Glasgow), 2002.
  • Half the World Away (Hallwalls contemporary Arts Center), 2002.
  • Rob Tufnell, For Example (Spike Island, Bristol), 2002.
  • Transmission, (Transmission Gallery, Glasgow), 2002.

External links[]

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