Yoko Ono among artists exploring beauty

Yoko Ono’s A hole to see the sky through (1961/71)
Yoko Ono’s A hole to see the sky through (1961/71)
Works by Yoko Ono and Turner Prize nominee Karla Black feature in a new exhibition on the nature of beauty. Beholder is a collection of more that 40 pieces of art united not because they belong to the same period or movement, but because they are all considered beautiful. The University's Talbot Rice Gallery asked high profile curators and artists to nominate a work that fits their personal view of beauty. The result is an exhibition that includes works from a diverse collection of artists and designers such as abstract artist Callum Innes, painter L.S. Lowry, modernist architect Sir Basil Spence, visual artist George Wylie, and painter Giorgio Morandi. The selections, donated by private and public collections from as far a field as New York and Berlin, create an unusual and contemporary take on the idea of beauty. Classical forms are side by side with modernist architecture. Beholder will also invite members of the public to share their views and tastes on what is beautiful via a Facebook page and at a series of events that coincide with the exhibition.
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