Draft:Guy Moreton

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Guy Moreton (born Lincoln, 1971) is a British artist. He studied photography at the University for the Creative Arts Farnham, and Fine Art at Norwich School of Art and Design before being awarded a Scottish Arts Council research fellowship in photography at Edinburgh Napier University. He taught at Northumbria University in Newcastle before moving to Southampton where he is currently Associate Professor of Visual Arts at Solent University.

He is co-author, with Alec Finlay and Michael Nedo, of Ludwig Wittgenstein There Where You Are Not[1][2]. His work has been exhibited and published widely including Machines à Penser[3] at the Fondazione Prada Venice with Albrecht Dürer, Ian Hamilton Finlay, Goshka Macuga, Susan Philipsz, and Gerhard Richter curated by Dieter Roelstraete for the Venice Biennale of Architecture; the Neubauer Collegium for Culture and Society, University of Chicago; the Hatton Gallery, Newcastle University; the Art Pavilion, Zagreb; Norwich Castle Museum and Art Gallery; the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, University of East Anglia; the John Hansard Gallery, University of Southampton; EAST International 1999 selected by Peter Doig and Roy Arden at Norwich University of the Arts; Kettle's Yard, University of Cambridge; and The Whitechapel Gallery Open, London.

His artworks have been acquired for major national and international collections[4] including the Fondazione Prada Milan, Southampton City Art Gallery, Tullie House Museum and Art Gallery Carlisle, and the University of Southampton.



References[edit]

  1. ^ Need, Michael (2005). Ludwig Wittgenstein There Where You Are Not. London: Black Dog Publishing. p. 159. ISBN 1904772161.
  2. ^ Moreton, Guy (2005). Ludwig Wittgenstein There Where You Are Not. London: Black Dog Publishing. p. 159. ISBN 1904772161. Retrieved 11 December 2023.
  3. ^ Moreton, Guy. "Machines à Penser". Fondazione Prada. Retrieved 11 December 2023.
  4. ^ Moreton, Guy. "Tullie House Museum and Art Gallery". Contemporary Art Society. Retrieved 11 December 2023.