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[uz], [uz], [uz]: Artists from Working-Class Backgrounds

[uz], [uz], [uz]: Artists from Working-Class Backgrounds Catalogue

£8.00

Description

First published in 2025 to coincide with the exhibition '[uz], [uz], [uz]: Artists from Working-Class Backgrounds' at The Stanley & Audrey Burton Gallery.

www.leeds.ac.uk/galleries

 

Detailed Description

Introduction by Laura Claveria. Essays by Derek Horton, Laura Claveria and Simon Marginson.
 
Published by The Stanley & Audrey Burton Gallery, 2025.
 
Colour images. 56.pp.
 
***
 
Challenge your expectations in this landmark group exhibition.
 
‘[uz], [uz], [uz]’ is a celebration of the breadth and vitality of work by artists from working-class backgrounds. It features the work of over thirty modern and contemporary artists who were born in or have significant connections to Yorkshire. Their works range in medium, including painting, sculpture, photography, drawing, installation and film.
 
The exhibition is also a challenge to class-related prejudices and stereotypes. Whilst privileging working-class voices, ‘[uz], [uz], [uz]’ aims not to reduce artists’ practice to their class. Instead, we recognise and celebrate the complexity of their realities and experiences.
 
While some address working-class issues and identity, others do not engage with class in their work. Some deal with form and materiality, landscape, the bodily, or the everyday. Others explore issues around inequality, memory, trauma or tradition. Importantly, the exhibition brings to the fore intersectional experiences. These include Black, Queer, feminist and disabled perspectives.
 
The exhibition also includes selected works from the University Art Collection, many of which are being shown for the first time. Alongside the exhibition, the University has commissioned a new installation for our collection by Leeds-based artist Simeon Barclay (b. 1975).
 
'[uz], [uz], [uz]' borrows its title from a verse in the poem ‘Them & [uz]’ by Leeds-born poet Tony Harrison (1937 – 2025). This poem is a powerful and provocative commentary on class division and cultural exclusion. The Tony Harrison Archive is held within Cultural Collections & Galleries.