Posts by adminThomas
Embody Without Burden, RGI, 2020
Beyond Epilepsy, CCA (2016) Online blog collaboration and installation
Beyond Epilepsy is working with Glasgow Science Festival 2016 to ask whether a greater understanding of the brain has led to more understanding in society as a whole. This project. led by academic Rachel Hewitt aims to be a platform for artists, not only promoting disabilities, but also artists with disabilities. Beyond Epilepsy is a…
Read More21 Revolution Publication, 2014
Mansfield, S. Glasgow Women’s Library celebrates 21st anniversary, The Scotsman, 2014
Mansfield, S., A Perfect Birthday, The Scotsman Weekend Life Magazine, 2014. p16-17 TURNING 21 is a traditional coming-of-age, for organisations as well as people. And if any proof were needed that Glasgow Women’s Library has reached maturity, one needs only to look through the pages of the 21 Revolutions, an ambitious collection of new work…
Read MoreGSA Prospectus, 2013
21 Revolutions, The List, 7 Sept 2012
21 Revolutions Online Publication, 2012
21 Revolutions, Two Decades of Changing Minds at Glasgow Women’s Library. Glasgow Women’s Library is the sole resource of its kind in Scotland. Informed by and
connected with the international feminist art and archive projects that proliferated from the 1970s on, it launched in Garnethill in 1991.
21 Revolutions Invitation, 2012
McMeekin. E, New artwork to celebrate the life of Govan heroine, Herald Scotland, 2012
By Elizabeth McMeekin SHE is known as one of the most influential women in Glasgow in the early 20th century, became the first female Labour councillor in the city and tirelessly campaigned for the working classes. Friday 9 March 2012 Now Mary Barbour, who lived in Govan in the early 1900s, is to be celebrated…
Read MoreInternational Women’s Day celebrates the life of Mary Barbour, BBC, 8 March, 2012
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-17304237 A project celebrating the life and work of Mary Barbour has been launched as part of International Women’s Day. Barbour was a housewife who roused thousands of women to protest at steep rent increases for living in Glasgow tenements during WWI. Mary Barbour’s leadership was responsible for a new rent restriction law. She also…
Read MoreThis is Central Station, 2011
Sharon Thomas’ Herstory in context
Historian and curator Francesco Nevola
Sharon Thomas’ project Herstory Portrait comprises a series of seven portraits of women that the painter has met in her capacity as an artist. Her paintings have been conceived of from the outset as a series – they are painted on identically sized panels, in the same egg-tempera media and the sitters are all presented bust-length – these shared qualities serve to formally unite the group of works.
The Portrait of the Artist as a Young Woman
‘She has followed the same course as myself in the adoption of portrait painting, and is earning success merited by fine colouring, by great sincerity, and, particularly, by perfect resemblance. Still young, she can but add to a reputation which in her diffidence and modesty she has scarcely ventured to foresee.’
Read MoreTelling the Herstories: a perspective on Glasgow, gender and the marking of women’s histories.
Adele Patrick, Lifelong Learning and Creative Development Manager and a founder of Glasgow Women’s Library. Glasgow: a man made city?
I arrived in Glasgow as a student at Glasgow School of Art in 1983. My experience of living in the city in the intervening years coincides with its reinvention as a ‘cultural capital’. The politicians and guardians of culture had much to make-over in the post-war period. The city endured seismic impacts in the blows dealt to its economy at this time in the second half of the 20th century and subsequently in the systematic dismantling of the major manufacturing industries in the late 1970s. This constituted an identity crisis for a city whose reputation was mythically ‘Clyde Built’.
Deanna Maganias: Herstory Portrait interview with Frances Robertson 2011
For my contact with artist Deanna Maganias, the usual format of a physical sitting is re-formatted to spoken word, with Deanna currently based in Italy: travelling back and forth from Greece due to exhibition commitments. Therefore for these conversations Deanna and myself have opportunity to talk independently and juggle the joys of time zone confusion.
Read MoreElish Angiolini: Herstory Portrait interview with Frances Robertson 2011
Elish Angiolini is the first woman Lord Advocate of Scotland, the chief legal officer of the Scottish Government and of the Crown in Scotland. She was appointed in October 2006 and her post will run until May this year. The portrait sittings have all taken place in her rooms in the Crown Office in Edinburgh, an imposing nineteenth century building in Chambers Street, constructed first as the Watt Institute and then expanded to form a part of Heriot-Watt University, before it was taken over and refurbished for its current purpose. Before entering the Crown Office, then, one is greeted with busts of industrial heroes on the façade, and the main entrance is topped not by a figure of blind Justice, but by a busy hammering smith at an anvil. The interior decorations have a more legalistic theme however, with one area containing a display of images of many of the past Lord Advocates. Although some of these images have been taken from what appear to be official portraits, rendered in print reproductions such as copper engravings of mezzotints, several images have come from much more informal sources such as topical caricatures or comical news stories of their periods.
Read MoreRuth Wishart: Herstory Portrait interview with Frances Robertson 2010
Ruth Wishart is a journalist, broadcaster and commentator with a prominent place in Scottish public and cultural life. She has a great talent for facilitating debate and action in the field of ethics, the arts and in social policy and has served as a trustee or board member for many arts organizations. Ruth went almost straight into journalism after leaving school, and has learned her trade through the constant discipline of writing for deadlines ever since.
Read MoreJohann Lamont: Herstory Portrait interview with Frances Robertson 2010
WE meet Johann on a very balmy August morning at The Wedge, which is a community resource centre situated in Greater Pollock, and our interview convenes in an large open plan meeting room that over looks a very busy traffic intersection. This building is Johann’s contact base within her Glasgow Pollok Constituency, when she is not working from her office within the Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh. Johann Lamont has been the MSP (member of the Scottish Parliament) for her constituency since 1999, with currently responsibilities as deputy leader for the Labour party in the Parliament as well as being spokesperson on Communities, Equal Opportunities and Housing.
Read MoreJean McFadden: Herstory Portrait interview with Frances Robertson 2010
Jean McFadden has been involved in local politics and in teaching all her life. She was the first female leader of Glasgow City Council (from 1979), and now in her seventies, Jean is still a working councillor for Glasgow ward: Garscadden/Scotstounhill.
Read MoreSeona Reid: Herstory Portrait interview with Frances Robertson 2011
We meet in Seona’s office within the Mackintosh Building at the Glasgow School of Art. The Director’s office adjoins the first floor Mackintosh Museum, and sits above the foyer entrance, overlooking the sweep of steps on to Renfrew Street. The office/ meeting space is spaciously set out and furnished with Mackintosh pieces such as chairs/ table and writing desk. There is a small private cloakroom/ pantry and a studio space above, reached by a narrow spiral staircase, that gives the whole area the hushed secluded character of a retreat or private suite; however, that feeling is so strongly in accord with our perception of the Mackintosh’s architectural vision that it holds the host and visitor suspended in anonymity. By contrast, the choice of paintings by alumni of the School on the walls indicate more an individual mixture of personal choices.
Read MoreArtists for Athens Pride II, Athens Voice, 2010
‘Mother/mother’, AIR Gallery, New York 2008
APT: Artist Parents Talking, New York, 2008 AIR Gallery, 111 Front St, #228, Brooklyn, NY 11201 Wednesday December 2, 6-8 PM Hosted by Mother/mother artist Rachel Howfield An event to discuss the challenges faced by the artist as a parent, the strategies developed to overcome them and how artists can better support each other.
Read MorePeacocke, H. 2009. Tales of Shiney-Shiney, Oxford Times Review, 2009
The dry autumn leaves strewn on the floor of the North Wall Gallery, Summertown, have not been blown in by the wind. They are all part of the picture ‘Apotropaic’, by Sharon Thomas, which dominates the main wall.
Read MoreRice, G. (2009) Apotropaic: Sharon Thomas at Museet for Religiøs Kunst
A Review of by Gráinne Rice “And wherever you do, whatever you do, there’s always that damp little island called the past…” Many of the works in the Apotropaic exhibition were developed whilst Sharon Thomas was a Sainsbury Scholar at the British School in Rome (2005-06). As implied by Morrissey’s words (another ex-pat anglo in…
Read MoreTales of Shiney-Shiney, Oxford, November 2009
Installation of ‘Shiney-Shiney’, a solo show by Sharon Thomas curated by Sarah Lacey composed of work made in the New York, Rome and Glasgow.
Read MoreButler, S. (2009) Neo-Maternalism: Contemporary Artists’ Approach to Motherhood, The Brooklyn Rail
Critical Perspectives on Art, Politics and Culture, Dec 2008/Jan 2009 Ever since the Abstract Expressionists held forth at the Cedar Tavern in the 1950s, the unwritten rule has been that making art is a consuming obsession that leaves no time or space for worldly responsibilities like childrearing. Before the AbExers, an artist like Gaugin left…
Read MoreApotropaic press Kunst Kalenderen 2009
Francesco Nevola: In conversation with Sharon Thomas: painter, thinker and jester, 2009
In conversation with Sharon Thomas: painter, thinker and jester, Francesco Nevola, Apotropaic, 2009
Read MoreDamgaark, A. 2009, Sharon Thomas: Apotropaic, Holstebro-Struer
Mother Mother Flier
GI Cross Section, 2008
Preface to Apotropaic by Gerd Rathje 2008
Superstition , folk tales and myths and the influences such narrations have on our conception of reality are themain themes in the exhibition ‘Apotropaic’ opening this spring at the Museum of Religious Art, Denmark. In her work the British artist Sharon Thomas shows the storiesandmyths that we are part of and that are moulding our philosophy of life and our identity.Sharon Thomas’ charcoal drawings, paintings, and shadow installations unfold a world inhabited by characters that partly belong to the existing world in the English parishes such as Northwich, the town where Sharon was born and grew up.
Read MoreNevola, F. (2008). Sharon Thomas: Making of a Painter, Apotropaic, Museet fur Religios Kunst
Over the course of the next pages we will follow the career of one young painter, Sharon Thomas, whose work is committed to the exploration of still un-charted territories such as class, gender, identity and faith in contemporary society: a quest which, on occasion, is not without humour. In reconstructing the enigmatic and winding path this career has taken, that over the course of a decade, has led from Cheshire in England to Glasgow in Scotland and onto New York City and Rome, before returning to Glasgow where she now lives, we will in this essay, encounter Thomas’ own energetic accounts of the events that have influenced her work and, explore the main issues that animate it.
Read MoreMa Come Mai, Paolo Bonzano Gallery, 2007
Apotropaic, British School at Rome, 2007
Risky Business PPOW Press Release, August 2006
Salon NYC, 2006
New York Sun-Risky Business Promo, 2006
British School at Rome catalogue, 2005-2006
OVERLAP2, The British School at Rome, 2006
WILLIAM COBBING, JUAN FORD, LAUREN LAVITT, STEVEN MacIVER, EAMON O´KANE, SARAH STEAD, SHARON THOMAS The British School at Rome via Gramsci 61, 00197 Roma tel. 06 3264939 http://www.bsr.ac.uk Opening: Thursday, 16 March 2006, 6.30-9.30 PM 17-25 March 2006, Monday-Saturday, 4.30-7.00 PM and by appointment info: finearts@bsrome.it The next exhibition of The British School at Rome…
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