On Your Marks: A Nomadic Season of Events

Film still showing artist Luke Hart constructing metal and rubber sculpture Fractal Weave - On Your Marks: A Nomadic Season of Events
Still from Luke Hart: Fractal Weave Structure 1 (2013), film by Daniel Gower, shown at ‘Are You Sitting Down?’ Screening sculpture in/as moving image

On Your Marks took place in and around London between July 2013 and January 2014. This nomadic season of events sought to support the practice of sculpture through programming that explored perceptions of sculpture and three dimensional art making today.

Through tours and discussions, workshops and screenings, we aimed to engage sculpture from diverse and even contradictory perspectives.

A printed publication of the research generated through On Your Marks was launched in 2014 and is publicly available as a digital download on our Publications page.

The season was facilitated by Marsha Bradfield (Curator) and Lucy Tomlins (Producer) and subsidised for participants thanks to the generous support of the Esmée Fairbairn Foundation

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What do we gain from encountering sculpture in the unlikely context of a cinema?

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Open Lecture explored the relationship between sculptural expressions, architectural forms and engineering principles with reference to ancient, Renaissance and modern vaulted and domed structures.

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Both Sides Now was an experimental two-day sculpture workshop using concrete to explore the architectural proposition as an approach to sculptural production.

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More than 18 workshop contributors and 150 attendees made Pangaea’s How Did You Do That? An Artistic Skillshare a rich and rewarding four-day programme at the Bussey Building, Peckham for

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As the name suggests, Sculptour: an Experiential Fieldtrip to Roche Court was a chance to get out of London and experience sculpture in the garden and fields of a stately

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Set in the domestic space of a private loft in Shoreditch, this salon-style event was a unique opportunity to get up close and personal with sculpture today—to drill down into

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Tea and A Slice of Reality was a rare opportunity to visit Richard Wilson’s impressive Millennium commission on the Greenwich Peninsula and discuss it with the sculptor in person and
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