Allison Katz: Artery

Delightfully weird, but wonderful. Allison Katz’s first institutional solo show in the UK at Nottingham Contemporary.

Allison Katz: Artery

London-based Canadian artist Allison Katz showcased her first institutional solo show in the UK in Nottingham Contemporary’s Art Gallery. The exhibition, Artery, is a playful take on identity and expression, paired with a unique sense of humour and curiosity. 

The weird but wonderful pieces present various scenarios, ranging from allegorical caves, bodily perspectives and an almost near replica of a lift. Placed next to the working lift, I wonder how many people walked straight into it!

A collection of the paintings, from inside a gaping mouth, stood out from the rest of the exhibition, in an impressive and engaging manner. This delightfully peculiar perspective is distinctive, memorable and adds a touch of surrealism to each piece. Katz’s skills as an artist are impressive, managing to walk the line between an excellent pairing of hyperrealism and surrealism. 

All of her works feature a play on perspective. Katz said, “I want to emphasise the non-order of things, from inside to out”, which is certainly reflected within her art. Another interesting play is that arteries are inside us, and ‘art’ is inside the word artery, but also, as Katz explains, “the arterial is used to describe major highways, subterranean cabling, branching rail networks and winding river systems”, which Katz features as landscapes within a few pieces. 

Allison Katz’s artworks work delightfully as a collection and possess a unique ability to be exhibited well in any space. 

Although I am disappointed by Nottingham Contemporary’s lack of titles and dates for each piece of art and would have liked to have known the name of each work upon walking around the exhibition, Katz’s work is so inquisitive, innovative, and entirely unique that it makes up for it. The art stands for itself and deserves a 5-star rating regardless. 

Header Image Credit: "Nottingham Contemporary - High Pavement, Nottingham - back-to-front sign" by ell brown is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0

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Elle Farrell-Kingsley

Elle Farrell-Kingsley Contributor

Elle is an award-winning passionate advocate for youth policy, AI ethics, and interdisciplinary approaches. Recognised for reporting and researching emerging technologies and their impact, Elle has earned accolades such as the 100 Brilliant Women in AI Ethics™ 2024, the TechWomen100 Award, and the Lord Blunkett Award at the University of Law. Using these tech insights, she's also a bestselling sci-fi author, having reached #2 in New Releases and #30 in Literary Short Stories Bestsellers. Her achievements have led to a funded place on the Sustainable Finance programme at the Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment University of Oxford, a Lord Blunkett scholarship covering her Legal Technology, AI and Cyberlaw studies, and a prestigious John Schofield Fellowship with a mentor from BBC World News, enhancing her skills in broadcast media. Her work spans impactful journalism, content curation for AI search engines, and advocating for informed policies in the UK Parliament.

With a humanities and social sciences background, she offers a unique perspective that encourages readers to explore the intersection of arts, technology, policy, and society.

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