April Showers
Atheneum Gallery Sunderland
April 2022
Creative Futures Exhibition
National Glass Centre
Sunderland Creatives Gallery
April 2022
Sucker/Succour
The Priestman Gallery, University of Sunderland
7th February 2022 to 4th March 2022
Instagram – suckersuccour
Sucker/Succour @thewrong.biennale
linktr.ee/suckersuccour
Lockdown Walks 2020, Early Autumn
Embossed Screen Prints on Somerset Velvet
Bath Gallery Open Exhibition, Bishop Auckland Town Hall
December 2021 – January 2022
Art Seen – Group Exhibition
Embossed Screen Prints on Somerset Velvet
The Witham, Barnard Castle
30th November – 23rd December 2021
Art Seen – Group Exhibition
Embossed Screen Prints on Somerset Velvet
The Witham, Barnard Castle
30th November – 23rd December 2021
A Conversation with Nature
Installation for North Pennines Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty
Bowlees Visitor Centre
Early October – Late November 2021
Fragility in Nature
Installations with glass – looking at and thinking about fragility of nature.
Responding to the work of David Nash
‘Where we are Now’ exhibition
The Sunderland Museum and Winter Gardens
21st September 2021 – 11th October 2021
Circles and Sound
MA Fine Art Interim Show – Sunderland University
June 2021
Sound
Bank Gallery, North Shields
19th April 2021 – 17th May 2021
Birdsong and understanding the other ‘Other’
For more than 150 years scientists have generally considered birdsong to be a male trait, however, recent research shows that both males and females in many bird species sing, and it was female scientists who turned out to be the key factor in these findings.
Many other factors, such as race, ethnicity, geographic location and socioeconomic standing, might not only inform our understanding of birdsong, but also ourselves.
To paraphrase author Rachel Mundy:
In hearing ourselves listen to birds, we can begin to notice foundational notions of difference that inform both how we hear, and how we see, birds and others.
Rachel Mundy
Arts Council Collection – Paint the Town in Sound takeover
Sunderland Museum and Winter Gardens
26th April 2021 – 16th May 2021
Birdsong and understanding the other ‘Other’
For more than 150 years scientists have generally considered birdsong to be a male trait, however, recent research shows that both males and females in many bird species sing, and it was female scientists who turned out to be the key factor in these findings.
Many other factors, such as race, ethnicity, geographic location and socioeconomic standing, might not only inform our understanding of birdsong, but also ourselves.
To paraphrase author Rachel Mundy:
In hearing ourselves listen to birds, we can begin to notice foundational notions of difference that inform both how we hear, and how we see, birds and others.
Rachel Mundy
SelfScapes 2021
Dalby Forest
12th April 2021
Shrine Gallery NYC Online Art Exhibition
February 2021
‘Pushing the Boundaries’
Arts Council Collection takeover – Sunderland Museum and Winter Gardens April 2020
Gas Contemporary – ‘Spaces’ Exhibition
March 2020