Alex Frost (artist)
Alex Frost is a British contemporary artist, exhibiting internationally. BackgroundAlex Frost currently lives and works in Manchester, UK where he teaches Art and Design at The University of Salford. ExhibitionsFrost's often humorous work addresses the fluid boundaries between public and private space, the virtual and physical, the temporal and permanent. He is best known for his large mosaic sculptures that depict product packaging and branding. These have been included in exhibitions at Dundee Contemporary Arts, Venice Biennale, Milton Keynes Gallery, Studio Voltaire and Frieze Sculpture Park. In 2018, he devised ‘Wet Unboxing’, a series of videos he uploaded onto YouTube.[2] In these videos he opened products underwater. The products were all symbolic of a life on the go’, a lifestyle of super-convenience. Vice Motherboard described these videos as ‘a proto-meme—a precious, terrifying embryo—of the next new trend’.[3] ResidenciesIn 2015 he was Phynance Resident[4] at Flat Time House, London. His other residencies include Cove Park,[5] Scotland in 2014; The Walled Garden,[6] Glasgow in 2013; AIR Antwerpen,[7] Belgium in 2010; Glenfiddich Artist Residency,[8] Dufftown, Scotland in 2009; Artsway,[9] Hampshire in 2007; Spike Island, Bristol[10] in 2002 and Grizedale Arts,[11] Cumbria in 2000. CollaborationsIn addition to his independent art practice he has been involved in a number of artistic collaborations. Notably, the devising and running of the artist-run radio station Radiotuesday (1998-2002)[12] with Duncan Campbell (artist) and Mark Vernon; Wave Rhythm by Louis Braille (2012)[13] with Stephen Livingstone from Errors (band), a limited edition flexi-disc single generated using a hybrid analogue/digital music and drawing machine and Flourish Nights (2001)[14] a season of screenings and performances organised with the artists Lucy McKenzie, Sophie Macpherson and Julian Kildear. CollectionsFrost's work is held in numerous private and public collections with his mosaic sculpture Adult (Ryvita/Crackerbread)(2007) in the collection of Glasgow Museums[15] Notes and references
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