Sarah commissioned for 20/20 project for Decolonising Arts Institute at UAL

Sarah has been commissioned for Decolonising Arts Institute at UAL. She will undertake a 15-month paid residency hosted by partner museums, galleries, and art collections, and participate in a peer support network, to develop her artistic practice. Sarah’s residency will be at at Bradford Museums and Galleries and will lead to the production of a commissioned artwork that will enter their permanent collection, with a print acquired by the 19 partner institutions.

20/20 was launched in November 2021 by UAL Decolonising Arts Institute, working in partnership with 20 UK public collections, museums and galleries. The project has been generously supported by a £300,000 grant from Freelands Foundation, a £300,000 grant from Arts Council England’s National Lottery Project Grants Programme and funding from UAL

The project was conceived in response to urgent calls for action within arts and culture in the wake of Black Lives Matter, as social inequities and racial injustices continued to be amplified by the COVID-19 pandemic.

The selected artists work across a diverse range of media, traversing painting, print, photography, filmmaking, animation, drawing, ceramics, and sculpture. The first cohort of 8 artists was announced in September 2021, and their residencies are currently underway, pairing a total of 20 artists with 20 UK collections and resulting in 20 new permanent acquisitions over the life of the project.

20/20 partners:

  • The Box, Plymouth

  • Bradford District Museums and Galleries

  • Bristol Museum and Art Gallery

  • Compton Verney, Warwickshire

  • Harris Museum, Preston

  • The Hepworth Wakefield

  • The Herbert Art Gallery and Museum, Coventry

  • Kelvingrove Art Gallery & Museum, Glasgow

  • Kettle's Yard, Cambridge

  • Leeds Art Gallery

  • The Lightbox, Woking

  • Manchester Art Gallery

  • MIMA (Middlesbrough Museum of Modern Art)

  • National Disability Arts Collection and Archive (NDACA)

  • National Museums NI (Ulster Museum)

  • Pallant House Gallery, Chichester

  • Sheffield Museums Trust

  • Walker Art Gallery, National Museums Liverpool

  • Wolverhampton Art Gallery

  • Birmingham Museums Trust

'Labour of Love' book out now!

A brand new book featuring all 650 works from the ‘Labour of Love’ installation, including an essay by Dr Kate McMillan.
Click here to get your copy!

ABOUT THE BOOK

After having her baby, Sarah decided to track the number of times her newborn baby was fed over three months. She counted 650 feeds and created an equal number of artworks . Each piece was a picture of herself and her baby - but in every image she erased herself and kept the baby visible.

The installation “Labour of Love” showcases all these artworks and invites you as a visitor to contemplate the appreciation of motherhood. This breathtaking installation was first exhibited by KochxBos Gallery during Art Rotterdam and sparked numerous, sometimes emotional, conversations and reactions. Now, it has been transformed into a brick-sized book, a collector’s item featuring all (!) the amazing artworks: a whopping 688 pages thick!

688 pages full colour
150 x 215 x 55 mm 
100 grs Munken White paper
Black reading ribbon
9789082194494
Click here to get your copy!

New commission 'Let Them Eat Nothing' for 'The Gallery'

Sarah’s new work ‘Let Them Eat Nothing’ is a new commission from The Gallery, a new platform exhibiting art in public spaces all over the UK. The theme for this season was ‘The State We’re In’.

‘Let Them Eat Nothing’ came from a build-up of frustration towards the government. For Sarah, this had been brewing for some time but particularly since the pandemic. As UK citizens rely more and more on food banks and even warm banks this winter, Maple feels there is a ‘let them eat cake’ attitude from those in power.

“It reflects on the aftermath of ‘party-gate’ and our Prime Minister apparently being ‘ambushed with a cake’.With many saying ‘it’s all a lot of fuss over a cake’. I felt this was the perfect symbol to reflect ‘The State We’re In’.” – Sarah Maple

'Self Portrait with pocket square' at the centre for british photography.

The Centre for British Photography is a new gallery opening in January 2023 as a hub for British Photography. Located in central London with 8,000 square feet of space over three floors, the Centre will stage specially curated exhibitions and work with partner organisations across the UK.  It will also present works from the Hyman Collection in order to provide an over-view of British photography. 

Sarah’s work will be in ‘Headstrong’, curated by Anna Fox.

‘Headstrong’ celebrates the work of living photographers based in Britain. It looks at women who have made work that is concerned with how they are represented, what they are dealing with in their everyday lives and what it means to embrace diversities that challenge the conservative order of a patriarchal society. Their work is playful, thought-provoking and often surprising.

Anna Fox, from Fast Forward, comments:

“Fast Forward and Centre for British Photography are celebrating the work of women artists and photographers, based in the UK, who are breaking the mould, proposing new ideas and inventing new identities. This exhibition foregrounds artists and photographers who have been using self-portraiture as a tool to crack open the oppressive, often punishing nature of patriarchy. From exposing cyberbullies to exploring the multiplicity of female identity these portraits re-invent out dated concepts of how we should behave, how we should be and what we can become. The work speaks back to the tedious drone of misogynist culture(s) and proposes new ways of being and understanding.”

Sarah Maple Shortlisted For Aesthetica Art Prize 2022

Sarah’s video art sitcom ‘The Sarah Maple Show’ has been shortlisted for the Aesthetica Art prize 2022. The 20 shortlisted artists will be exhibited at York Art Gallery from 24 June - 18 September 2022.

A statement from the Aesthetica Art Prize Director and Curator, Cherie Federico:

"Over the past two years, we have witnessed radical shifts in the ways that we live, communicate, work and play – as well as how we travel, socialise and experience the joys of culture. The Aesthetica Art Prize is an annual celebration of contemporary art. The exhibition, which brings together this year’s talented finalists, invites you to explore, discover and engage with themes from our rapidly changing world – wide-ranging topics that include the ethics of representation, mass digitisation, globalisation, diasporic identities and the continuing threats posed by the climate crisis.  

 These pieces – both individually and collectively – disrupt the status quo. Together, they offer both personal and universal narratives whilst asking key questions about life right here in the 21st century, as we emerge from the pandemic. The projects span Argentina, France, Germany, Japan, Mexico, the UK and the USA, and push the boundaries of genre, from painting, photography and sculpture, to video, mixed-media and installation.

 The Aesthetica Art Prize is a way for you to convene, discuss and make sense of the present moment, at this critical juncture in history. Art has the power to unite. It is transformative. It takes us to new places, and introduces us to new cultures, but most importantly, it reminds us of our humanity."  

Exhibition at Jealous Gallery now open until 18th October

New solo exhibition ‘Sarah Maple’s Nazi Sexy Shark Show’ is now open! To view the catalogue click here

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Sarah Maple Calls Out the Artworld - by Kate Bryan

It is a time for reckoning in the art world, where straight white men have dominated both the commercial and institutional aspects of the art establishment for centuries. Sarah Maple, born in Eastbourne in 1985, was compelled to address structural sexism and racism in her work even as an art student, where she noticed that female students were given less air time and respect. Whilst still at college, she created the first of her self-portrait series, a triptych which borrows the person-holding-sign-with-text motif of the great YBA era artist, Gillian Wearing. From left we see Maple dressed in traditional Muslim attire, coyly smiling, her sign reads “I wish I had a penis”. This is followed by Maple in only red lipstick, bra and knickers with a franker expression and sign, “because then I’d fuck you”. Finally, we see her in a suit with red tie smugly smiling “then steal your job.” The appalled and shocked response from her professor and some of her classmates was a catalyst for Maple embracing provocation in her work and adopting an attitude that shone a big, noisy and often funny light on the elephant in the room.

A decade later and Maple has harnessed this frustration, dismay and disappointment in prevailing attitudes into mature and thought- provoking work that challenges ideas around identity, religion, race, the artworld, feminism and freedom of expression.  Often using herself as a conduit to challenge stereotypes and normative behaviour, Maple is adept at confronting complex issues that we are all thinking about with wit, irony and a startling honesty. Maple’s own mixed religious and cultural background informs much of her work and her latest exhibition, which I am honoured to curate, is a timely exploration into the systemic race, class and gender barriers in the artworld.

Maple’s title, Nazi Sexy Shark Show, arbitrarily takes its name from words with the highest ‘click through’ appeal and includes painting, text-based marble works, collage, photography and video. The focal point of the exhibition is a ground breaking series of short films. Maple has essentially invented an ‘art-com’, fusing video art with sitcoms. Exploring her experience of being an outspoken artist, each film is a semi-autobiographical piece, a heightened reality that draws influence from Extras and Curb Your Enthusiasm as well as seminal artists such as Cindy Sherman and Sarah Lucas. Often absurd, and always biting in its commentary, the films are championed by those that agreed to take part, sending themselves up as they did so. David Tenant, a real-life collector of Maple’s work, plays an egocentric and less than generous version of himself which is filmed at ‘Crawley Soho House’ (in reality the top floor of 76 Dean Street after Nick Jones couldn’t resist her idea).

The piece also includes the seminal artist Sonia Boyce, much talked about for being first black woman artist to represent Britain at the next Venice Biennale. She also has a run in with seasoned art critics Will Gompertz and Nikki Bedi. My cameo takes me to an uncomfortable place as I perform as a bad feminist version of myself, instructing Maple with sexist, racist and patronising advice which is based on Maple’s own experiences.  The art-com is a meta experience, blurring the line between fiction and reality. This is heightened by the fact that concurrent to being exhibited in a gallery, the piece will also be available to view in the U.K. on Sky Arts as short films– a channel which is now free to view. By positioning her work in people’s homes in this way, Maple is able to break down elitism that pervades the artworld, adapting the power of video art to include the accessibility of a sitcom.

Another work that bends reality is the photographic series, Portraits With Fans. We see Maple reluctantly posing grumpily for photographs with her adoring fans – some of the great male artists of our time: Damien Hirst; Jeff Koons; Grayson Perry; Anthony Gormley; Anish Kapoor; the Chapman Brothers; Marc Quinn; Mat Collishaw; Martin Creed; Olafur Eliasson, Wolfgang Tillmans and Matthew Barney. All perfectly photoshopped, Maple reverses the tables on these seasoned art world names, making them ridiculous in their fandom of a young, mixed race female artist. In her Celebrities in Stone series Maple plays with truth instead of fiction. The ingenious tablets present real-life tabloid headlines carved in marble such as Meghan Markle’s Avocado Snack Fuels Human Rights Abuses and Kim Kardashian Goes Topless With A Parakeet. Akin to ancient roman treasures, the new permanence of the medium highlights the facile and inane nature of ‘news’.

Maple also presents unreservedly joyful and exquisitely put together work such as the hand cut collage series that celebrates the female form in a vortex of beautiful shapes and colour. A parallel series about women, Clocks, employs digital collage to juxtaposes a selection of The Sun’s topless Page 3 Girls with their heads replaced by old fashioned clocks. The combination of imagery is drawn from being a young woman coming of age in the U.K in the nineties and the series highlights biological pressure on all women.  Her large painted self- portrait, Self Portrait with Preceptor is also a subtle but striking work, one that removes artifice and lays the artist’s soul bare. She sits in front of a blank canvas facing the viewer, making us either her accomplice or critic, with her mother lovingly standing beside her, waiting for the work to reveal itself. A meditation on the role of the artist and potential family issues surrounding making such personal artwork, it is a quiet, reflective painting. In the Jealous Gallery window, a Neon asks ‘Why Art’ almost rubbishing her whole endeavor. Maple is a provocateur, insisting we pay attention to the hypocrisies and dangerous elitism of the artworld. But she also rejoices in the artworld she despairs at, her power is to unpick the system with disarming satire and wit. It’s a timely show and we need artists like Maple to both ask and beautifully answer ‘Why Art’ with exhibitions like this.

SARAH MAPLE'S NAZI SEXY SHARK SHOW - OPENING OCTOBER 1ST 2020

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SARAH MAPLE'S NAZI SEXY SHARK SHOW

A SOLO EXHIBITION AT JEALOUS GALLERY CURATED BY KATE BRYAN

The unmissable exhibition is a ground breaking collaboration between one of the most potent and singular young voices in British art and a curator who is a loud champion of female artists and voice for anti-elitism in the arts.

 British artist Sarah Maple (b. 1985) will debut a new exhibition curated by Kate Bryan, arts Broadcaster and Head of Collections for Soho House globally. Maple is recognised for her provocative work that challenges ideas around identity, religion, the artworld, feminism and freedom of expression. Often using herself as a conduit to challenge stereotypes and normative behaviour, Maple is adept at confronting complex issues that we are all thinking about with wit, irony and a startling honesty. Maple’s own mixed religious and cultural background informs much of her work. She works across a variety of media including painting, photography, video, performance, ready-mades and collage. Her past exhibitions have focussed on Brexit, ardent feminist themes, xenophobia, Trump and toxic masculinity.

This exhibition is a culmination of her work to date and is her sharpest and most biting presentation yet: a satire on the artworld that she both rejoices in and despairs at. The exhibition arbitrarily takes its name from the words with the highest ‘click through’ appeal and will include text-based marble works, collage, mixed media installation and video. A key work is a ground breaking series of short films that fuse art with sitcoms. An ‘art-com’ if you will. Exploring the experience of being an artist, and a very particular outspoken artist, each film is a semi-autobiographical piece, a heightened reality that draws influence from Extras and Curb Your Enthusiasm as well as seminal artists such as Cindy Sherman and Sarah Lucas. Featuring Maple’s real-life collectors and colleagues –such as David Tennant, Sonia Boyce, Will Gompertz, Nikki Bedi and the curator Kate Bryan playing a bad feminist – the fictional sitcom/video art will be a meta experience, blurring the line between fiction and reality. In October the films will also be available to view on Sky Arts – which is now free to view and available to all. By having what is essentially video art meets sitcom available to all to view from home, Maple and Bryan aim to push the boundaries of what art can be and who it is available to.

Syllabus V at Wysing Arts Centre

Sarah has been selected for Syllabus V, a national, collaboratively-produced alternative learning programme, delivered by Wysing Arts Centre, Cambridge; Eastside Projects, Birmingham; Iniva (Institute of International Visual Arts), London; S1 Artspace, Sheffield; and Spike Island, Bristol. For Syllabus V, The NewBridge Project, Newcastle, have joined as a guest partner. The selected artists for Syllabus V are: Sophie Blagden, Juliet Davis-Dufayard, Yuxin Jiang, Hwa Young Jung, Sarai Kirshner, Jack Lewdjaw, Sarah Maple, Duncan Poulton and Aliaskar Torkaliaskari. Now in its fifth year, Syllabus V provides a learning programme for artists over a ten month period and is supported using public funding from Arts Council England. Syllabus is developed collaboratively with the participating artists, the partner institutions and the artistic advisors, who this year are Barby Asante and Louise Shelley.

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Sarah Commissioned for Baltic Exhibition by Sky Arts and Storyvault Films

Sarah was commissioned by Sky Arts and Storryvault films to make a new painting about identity in post Brexit Britain. The painting was exhibited at The Baltic in February 2019. The film about this work will be on  Sky Arts on Tuesday 26th March at 9pm in ‘A Picture Of Britain’.

‘Sarah Maple is creating a painting that explores the complex role of the British Empire in the construction of Modern British culture and identity. Sarah's work often draws on her own mixed background and in this piece, she is particularly interested in looking at her family's history of migrating to Britain as a result of colonialism.

In the 1950s, her Grandfather travelled from India to work on the railways in a British colony in Kenya. In exchange he was granted a British passport and when political trouble arose in Kenya in the 1960s, he came to Britain with his young family and settled in Birmingham. ‘At present it feels like we are having a global identity crisis. People all over the world are expressing the desire to ‘take back control’ of their countries. With the increase of migration in the west, there appears to be a feeling of nostalgia or loss of national identity. In some cases these feelings are beginning to manifest themselves in unpleasant ways. With recent coverage of 70 years since partition, this sparked my interest in the impact of the British Empire. It interests me that much of the diversity that is problematic to some, in fact has a direct link to our history. I think to understand our identity today, we need to understand the part Britain has played globally, especially our colonial past and how the wealth gained has formed the foundations of modern Britain. I think if we fail to understand the complex factors that have contributed to Modern Britain, this is where it sows doubt as to who gets to call it home. To recognise this and to let the world in, could be a way to make a start on how to live in our divided nation.’

Additional funding by Arts Council England.

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SOLO EXHITION IN NEW YORK 'THOUGHTS AND PRAYERS'

Sarah is excited to announce her forthcoming exhibition ‘Thoughts And Prayers’ at Untitled Space. In her usual provocative style, the show is a mixture of old and new work reflecting on current affairs with tongue in cheek satire.

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OPENING RECEPTION 
January 22nd // 6pm-9pm
RSVP: events@untitled-space.com

EXHIBITION ON VIEW
January 22 – February 9, 2019

THE UNTITLED SPACE
45 Lispenard Street Unit 1W
NYC 10013

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Sarah designs limited edition cover for Harper's Bazaar

Sarah has been invited to design a limited edition cover for Harper’s Bazaar annual art issue, celebrating women in art and the launch of the inaugural Bazaar Art Week. Her cover is alongside 7 artists such as Yayoi Kusama, Barbara Kruger, Linder Sterling, Njideka Akunyili Crosby and Heather Chontos. The November issue of the magazine is available now.

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Sarah selected for 'Not 30%

'Part exhibition and part protest against the male dominated art world’. Sarah has been selected for ‘Not 30%’ at The Other Art Fair, curated by Kate Bryan. To celebrate the 30th edition of the fair, The Other Art Fair are taking over a second site, The College, with an exhibition of 30 female artists taking centre stage. Read about it here in the Financial Times