A cumulative lists of all artists and projects involved in Nought to Sixty.
Nought to Sixty presents sixty projects by emerging artists based in Britain and Ireland over six months from 5 May to 2 November 2008.
Most of the artists in Nought to Sixty are under thirty-five, few of them have had significant commercial exposure, and in most cases this is their first opportunity to mount a solo project in a major public space.
The season is not intended to announce any new generation or style, but to build up a multifaceted portrait of the emerging art scene in the two countries, and to provide a space for exchange.
The Nought to Sixty programme consists of:
Events happen at the ICA every Monday night:
Sign up for regular updates about the Nought to Sixty and the rest of the ICA's programme, special events and offers. It's free.
Nought to Sixty is supported by:
Other partners:
A new worked created from research in the ICA archive, interviews with artists and educators and a workshop held in Dublin.
Modernist sculpture and design and the trappings of bourgeois living mixed with the hedonism of musical subcultures.
Short films which focus on lives led at one remove from society, looking on the desire to achieve liberty through the simplification of lifestyle.
Readings of short fiction by Fusco and others and a screening of the Maysles brothers' 1965 documentary short Meet Marlon Brando.
Short video works fusing found imagery with lyrical elements that include recordings of music and poetry.
Drypoint etchings reproducing ICA private-view cards, one for each year since 1950, when the institution first started producing such cards.
Francesca Gavin, arts editor of Dazed & Confused magazine, looks at contemporary art's relationship to the music and fashion scenes.
Conveying some persistent thoughts following a recent symposium at the ICA on the 'educational turn' in art.
Artist-led organisations that support networks of emerging art in Wales.
Photos of the projects, artists and audiences taking part in Nought to Sixty.
Nought to Sixty includes a series of monthly discussions that address the networks that form and contribute to an emerging scene.