Nash at Kew Souvenir Guide
By (Author) Michelle Payne
Royal Botanic Gardens
Kew Publishing
1st July 2012
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Individual artists, art monographs
Exhibition catalogues and specific collections
709.2
Paperback
96
Width 242mm, Height 280mm
This book marks the major exhibition 'David Nash at Kew Gardens' staged in Kew Gardens from 2012 through to April 2013. One of the UK's most prolific creators of ecological art, David Nash produced and exhibited his work across the Gardens, with sculptures, installations, drawings and film in place throughout the Gardens, glasshouses, and exhibition spaces. In a career spanning 40 years, Nash has created over 2,000 sculptures out of wood, many of them monumental in scale. These sculptures are sometimes carved using a chainsaw or axe, or partially burned to produce a charred surface. Through his work, he has gained a deep understanding of the properties of trees and the artistic process itself is, for Nash, deeply collaborative - between the artist, his material, and the natural world.
Extensively illustrated, this book gives a unique insight into Nash's art and life, and encourages readers to engage with the sculptures and their relation to nature, and the beautiful setting of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.
Michelle Payne holds an MA in twentieth century literature and its intellectual contexts, awarded by Goldsmith College, University of London. She is the author of Marianne North: A Very Intrepid Painter (Kew Publishing, 2011) and currently works as an editor at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.