ART & CULTURE IN NORWICH & NORFOLK
  • Calendar
    • List of exhibition dates
  • Get AiNN
    • Where to find Art in Norwich
    • Order by post
    • AiN/MiN by Post
    • Get in touch
  • Norwich Galleries & groups
    • Crypt Gallery
    • Anteros Arts
    • Art Fair East
    • East Gallery NUA
    • Edible East
    • Fairhurst Gallery
    • Mandell's Gallery - about >
      • Mandell's Gallery - current
    • n-cas
    • Norwich Castle
    • NCCS
    • Norwich 20 Group
    • Norwich Studio Art Gallery
    • Norwich University of the Arts
    • Outpost Gallery
    • Greenhouse Gallery
    • South Asia Collection
    • Sainsbury Centre >
      • Sainsbury Centre Sculpture
    • Shoe Factory Social Club
    • St Mary's Works
    • The Undercroft
  • Norfolk Galleries & groups
    • Bircham Gallery, Holt
    • North Norfolk Exhibition Project
    • Cromer Artspace
    • Diss Corn Hall
    • Fermoy Gallery, King's Lynn
    • Great Yarmouth Arts Festival
    • Houghton Hall 2024 >
      • Anish Kapoor Houghton Hall
    • NNAC Norfolk & Norwich Art Circle
    • North Norfolk Open Studios
    • original projects; PrimeYarc
    • Raveningham Sculpture Trail
    • Alfred Cohen Museum & Gallery
    • Wells Maltings
    • Yare Gallery
  • Art Classes
    • Anteros Art Classes
    • Artpocket
    • Art Society Norwich
    • Royal Drawing School
    • Nest Project
    • Annette Rolston printmaking
    • Sarah Cannell Workshops
  • Partner contact details
  • Links to partners
    • Barrington Farm
    • Original Projects;
  • Venue Map
  • Get Walls
  • St Margaret's Gallery
  • Past events
    • The Singh Twins : Slaves of Fashion
    • Ancient House Thetford
    • X Marks The Spot, Great Yarmouth
    • Time & Tide Drawn to the Coast 2018
    • H2O Art of Wet
    • Houghton Hall Henry Moore >
      • Henry Moore review
    • Paint Out
    • Lonely Arts Club 2016
    • Magnificent Obsessions
    • Norwich Castle Olive Edis
    • The Way We Live Now
    • ADP Riot Tour
    • Norwich Castle Sawdust & Threads
    • Ana Maria Pacheco
    • Hungate Medieval Art
    • Bacon and the Masters
    • War and Peace
    • Clive Dunn at Theatre Royal
    • John Craske : Threads
    • Art at Norwich Playhouse
    • John Lessore & John Wonnacott
    • NNOS
    • Hidden in Plain Sight
    • Mary Spicer at Theatre Royal
    • Masterpieces: Art and East Anglia
    • Masterpieces: Art & East Anglia talks
    • The Tourists
    • En Plein Air
    • Martin Laurance at Mandell's Gallery
    • Wallis exhibition
    • Picasso
    • Studios in Norfolk
    • Concrete - an exhibition at NUA
    • SCVA Sense & Sensuality lecture series
    • Affordable Art Fair
    • Art Car Boot pictures
    • Photography exhibition
  • EAAF Artist Profiles
    • East Anglian Art Fund June Gentle
    • East Anglian Art Fund Alison Henry
    • East Anglian Art Fund Jane Hodgson
    • East Anglian Art Fund John Christie
    • East Anglian Art Fund Red Elders
    • East Anglian Art Fund Julia Cameron
    • East Anglian Art Fund Vanessa Pooley
    • East Anglian Art Fund Kate Walker
    • East Anglian Art Fund Gus Farnes
    • East Anglian Art Fund Tobias Arnup
    • East Anglian Art Fund Tobias Arnup
  • Obituaries
    • David Holgate obituary

March 12th, 2024

12/3/2024

0 Comments

 

 Forthcoming exhibition at Norwich Castle Museum and Art Gallery : Roger Ackling, Sunlight

Picture
SUNLIGHT: Roger Ackling
18 May – 22 September 2024

Norwich Castle Museum & Art Gallery
​

SUNLIGHT is the first major survey of British artist Roger Ackling (1947-2014) and the most significant exhibition of his work to date. Reappraising Ackling’s practice 10 years after his death, SUNLIGHT is an unprecedented examination of one of the most quietly influential artists of the late 20th century.
For 50 years, Ackling consistently made objects by burning wood -- focussing sunlight through the lens of a hand-held magnifying glass to scorch repeated patterns of lines on the surface. Collecting driftwood from the beach at Weybourne near his home on the Norfolk coastline, as well as reclaimed broken and discarded materials, Ackling took little from the world to make his work and left nothing beyond a wisp of smoke in the air. His primary tool was the light of the sun – transforming energy in a process that was fundamentally photographic and yet also akin to a cauterising of the surface, much like a tattoo.
Like his contemporaries Richard Long and Hamish Fulton, who also graduated from Saint Martin's School of Art in the late 1960s, Ackling challenged the traditional and accepted methods of making sculpture by taking his art out of the studio and into the landscape environment. This exhibition at Norwich Castle Museum & Art Gallery reveals the breadth of his practice, from his earliest experiments with a lens, to his final works. Ackling is best known for his work on found driftwood, but SUNLIGHT expands this reputation to include lesser-known works made using domestic wooden objects, tools, and incorporating ready-made elements such as elastic bands and mapping pins. SUNLIGHT also features works on card and paper that have not been exhibited in the UK.
Ackling’s career is notable for both his unique practice and his long and influential teaching career. SUNLIGHT reveals the artist as a socially engaged, highly networked individual, consistently dedicated to making, exhibiting, and teaching – in equal measure, with each activity influencing the other. Ackling’s works are shown alongside previously unseen and little-known materials from the artist’s extensive archive at the Henry Moore Institute, Leeds, as well as a film of interviews with fellow artists and students such as Tony Cragg, Maggi Hambling, Dean Hughes and David Nash, examining the impact and legacy of Ackling’s practice.
From the mid-1970s, Ackling exhibited consistently internationally – most frequently in France, Switzerland, the US and Japan – but his work was comparatively less seen at home. He showed his work in lively and playful installations, arriving in a space with a suitcase full of works to install each object by hand. Informed by the Roger Ackling archive, SUNLIGHT references key exhibitions at distinct stages of his career to create installations that capture the grouping and rhythm of work as Ackling intended.
Guest Curator, Amanda Geitner says: Much has been said about the quiet beauty of Roger Ackling’s objects. I was fortunate to work with him on two exhibitions in the 1990s. SUNLIGHT presents the wonder of his works en-masse and the playful brilliance of his installations. An artist’s artist, Ackling had a gift for teaching and for friendship. This exhibition has been swept along by the affection and admiration of so many artists, students and curators – testifying to the enduring significance of his work today.
Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art, Norwich Castle Museum & Art Gallery, Dr Rosy Gray says: Within the parameters of his method, Ackling made a great variety of objects that are beautiful, enigmatic and powerful. They occupy a unique place in contemporary art practice – understood in relationship to Land Art, Minimalist and Conceptual Art practices and yet not defined by any one of these movements. SUNLIGHT testifies to this variety with more than 150 works on display, many of which have not been shown before in the UK.
Cllr Margaret Dewsbury, Cabinet member for Communities, Norfolk County Council, says: Roger Ackling spent significant periods of time living and producing work at Weybourne on the North Norfolk coast, so it feels particularly apt that the first major survey of his work will be shown first at Norwich Castle Museum & Art Gallery. In the decades since Ackling began his career, climate change has become an increasingly urgent concern – Ackling’s total absorption in the environment as he made his work and his commitment to using only materials which came to hand now seems only too prescient.
An accompanying hardback publication includes contributions from Sylvia Ackling, Amanda Geitner, Rosy Gray, Dean Hughes, Louis Nixon and Ian Parker, alongside a wealth of illustrations of both works and archival material.
SUNLIGHT will tour to the Henry Moore Institute in Leeds (4 April – 22 June 2025) and will show in a different form at the Pier Arts Centre, Orkney later in 2025.
SUNLIGHT is developed in partnership with the Artist’s Estate, Annely Juda Fine Art, the Henry Moore Institute, and the Pier Arts Centre. The exhibition is realised with the critical support of key funders: Norfolk Museums Service, Arts Council England, The National Lottery Heritage Fund, Norwich City Council, Norfolk County Council, East Anglia Art Fund, Henry Moore Foundation, Norwich University of the Arts and Art Fund. 
0 Comments



Leave a Reply.

    Author Marion Catlin

    Follow Art in Norwich for news about visual art activities in and around Norwich

    Archives

    October 2025
    May 2025
    March 2025
    February 2025
    June 2024
    April 2024
    March 2024
    July 2023
    July 2022
    June 2022
    May 2022
    July 2021
    May 2021
    April 2021
    September 2020
    June 2020
    May 2019
    December 2018
    May 2018
    March 2018
    February 2018
    January 2017
    November 2016
    September 2016
    August 2016
    July 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    December 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    April 2015
    March 2015
    January 2015
    December 2014
    November 2014
    September 2014
    August 2014
    July 2014
    December 2013

    Categories

    All
    Art In Norwich
    Lonely Arts Club
    NCAS
    Norwich Castle
    Waveney & Blyth Festival
    What Next?
    Workshops

    RSS Feed

Proudly powered by Weebly
  • Calendar
    • List of exhibition dates
  • Get AiNN
    • Where to find Art in Norwich
    • Order by post
    • AiN/MiN by Post
    • Get in touch
  • Norwich Galleries & groups
    • Crypt Gallery
    • Anteros Arts
    • Art Fair East
    • East Gallery NUA
    • Edible East
    • Fairhurst Gallery
    • Mandell's Gallery - about >
      • Mandell's Gallery - current
    • n-cas
    • Norwich Castle
    • NCCS
    • Norwich 20 Group
    • Norwich Studio Art Gallery
    • Norwich University of the Arts
    • Outpost Gallery
    • Greenhouse Gallery
    • South Asia Collection
    • Sainsbury Centre >
      • Sainsbury Centre Sculpture
    • Shoe Factory Social Club
    • St Mary's Works
    • The Undercroft
  • Norfolk Galleries & groups
    • Bircham Gallery, Holt
    • North Norfolk Exhibition Project
    • Cromer Artspace
    • Diss Corn Hall
    • Fermoy Gallery, King's Lynn
    • Great Yarmouth Arts Festival
    • Houghton Hall 2024 >
      • Anish Kapoor Houghton Hall
    • NNAC Norfolk & Norwich Art Circle
    • North Norfolk Open Studios
    • original projects; PrimeYarc
    • Raveningham Sculpture Trail
    • Alfred Cohen Museum & Gallery
    • Wells Maltings
    • Yare Gallery
  • Art Classes
    • Anteros Art Classes
    • Artpocket
    • Art Society Norwich
    • Royal Drawing School
    • Nest Project
    • Annette Rolston printmaking
    • Sarah Cannell Workshops
  • Partner contact details
  • Links to partners
    • Barrington Farm
    • Original Projects;
  • Venue Map
  • Get Walls
  • St Margaret's Gallery
  • Past events
    • The Singh Twins : Slaves of Fashion
    • Ancient House Thetford
    • X Marks The Spot, Great Yarmouth
    • Time & Tide Drawn to the Coast 2018
    • H2O Art of Wet
    • Houghton Hall Henry Moore >
      • Henry Moore review
    • Paint Out
    • Lonely Arts Club 2016
    • Magnificent Obsessions
    • Norwich Castle Olive Edis
    • The Way We Live Now
    • ADP Riot Tour
    • Norwich Castle Sawdust & Threads
    • Ana Maria Pacheco
    • Hungate Medieval Art
    • Bacon and the Masters
    • War and Peace
    • Clive Dunn at Theatre Royal
    • John Craske : Threads
    • Art at Norwich Playhouse
    • John Lessore & John Wonnacott
    • NNOS
    • Hidden in Plain Sight
    • Mary Spicer at Theatre Royal
    • Masterpieces: Art and East Anglia
    • Masterpieces: Art & East Anglia talks
    • The Tourists
    • En Plein Air
    • Martin Laurance at Mandell's Gallery
    • Wallis exhibition
    • Picasso
    • Studios in Norfolk
    • Concrete - an exhibition at NUA
    • SCVA Sense & Sensuality lecture series
    • Affordable Art Fair
    • Art Car Boot pictures
    • Photography exhibition
  • EAAF Artist Profiles
    • East Anglian Art Fund June Gentle
    • East Anglian Art Fund Alison Henry
    • East Anglian Art Fund Jane Hodgson
    • East Anglian Art Fund John Christie
    • East Anglian Art Fund Red Elders
    • East Anglian Art Fund Julia Cameron
    • East Anglian Art Fund Vanessa Pooley
    • East Anglian Art Fund Kate Walker
    • East Anglian Art Fund Gus Farnes
    • East Anglian Art Fund Tobias Arnup
    • East Anglian Art Fund Tobias Arnup
  • Obituaries
    • David Holgate obituary