University of the Arts London

Home

Skip primary navigation Skip secondary navigation

Rob Kesseler - Lusciousness

CSM Professorial Platform Lecture

 

Rob Kesseler

 

Luciousness: flora, and the crafted image in a digital environment

 

With it's seemingly endless array of colourful forms and structures, the plant world has inspired generations of artisans, artists, designers and illustrators, resulting in a spectacular wealth of images and objects that have served to inform and captivate it's many audiences. Styles and forms of representation have evolved in parallel to technological advances in science and industry, from drawing to painting, through photography and now digital media, the plant world continues to provide apowerful source for creative exploration. Since being given a microscope at the age of ten Rob Kesseler has always been fascinated by a world too small to see with the naked eye. Over the past ten years has collaborated with botanical scientists at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew and more recently with molecular biologists at the Gulbenkian Science Institute in Portugal to produce a body of work that exposes and celebrates this exotic and alluring micro world in a unique way. Just as plants employ colour coded messages to attract an audience of insect collaborators; through artistic intervention and interpretation he has sought to create mesmeric images and symbolic objects that carry many messages: markers with which we retain contact with the natural world. Lusciousness weaves together some influential works from the past two thousand years of Art with key works throughout his career.


To coincide with the lecture,a monograph, Rob Kesseler Up Close, covering the past thirty years of the artists work will be published by Papadakis, London.

Wednesday 3rd March @ 6:30 pm

Tickets Free

(maximum two per booking)

 

BOOK ONLINE

Box Office: 020 7269 1606

 

Tickets must be collected on the day of the event, at least 15 minutes before the event is due to begin. Any uncollected tickets after this point may be reallocated to the returns queue.

 

Rob Kesseler