Launch: Saturday 10th August 2024
Dates: Saturday 10th August to Saturday 21st September 2024
Gallery: Upper Gallery
We are launching our beautiful new Upper Gallery at 23-29 Queen Street with an exhibition featuring a selection of key works by Graham Fagen.
The End of Art is Peace features ‘The Slave’s Lament’ video installation, which premiered at Scotland + Venice 2015, when Fagen represented Scotland at the Venice Biennale. Its score is by Sally Beamish, performed by the Scottish Ensemble and Reggae singer Ghetto Priest, and produced by legendary On-U-Sound founder Adrian Sherwood.
The exhibition also includes neon piece ‘War/Garden (after Tubby)’ previously shown with Golden Thread Gallery at the London Art Fair 2017, as part of our Radio Relay Project.
Living and working in Glasgow, Graham Fagen continues to be one of the UK’s foremost contemporary artists. Working across mediums including video, installation, sculpture, photography, and text, Fagen creates works which explore history and culture. He is interested in how history and culture is created and how in turn this shapes and forms who we are or who we become.
Common themes of his work have included Scotland and the transatlantic slave trade, war, plants, journeys, poetry, and popular song, as a means through which to explore the varying forces impacting our contemporary culture and identity.
“The End of Art is Peace is a line from ‘The Harvest Bow’ by Seamus Heaney. It’s a line I’ve pondered for a long time and perhaps the location of our exhibition, in the country where Seamus was born, has brought it back into my thoughts. I [have] talked about my personal conflict when making works of art about war or the transatlantic slave trade. If the end of art is peace does that suggest that the start or the process of art can be conflicting?” – Graham Fagen
About the Artist
Graham Fagen (born 1966) studied sculpture at The Glasgow School of Art (1984-1988, BA (Hons)) and Art & Architecture at the Kent Institute of Art and Design (1989-1990, MA). He is Professor of Fine Art at Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art & Design at the University of Dundee.
In the UK he is represented by Matt’s Gallery, London and he has exhibited at institutions including Victoria & Albert Museum, Tate Britain and the Institute of Contemporary Arts. In 1999 he was invited by the Imperial War Museum, London to work as the Official War Artist for Kosovo.
Internationally he has exhibited at the Busan Biennale, South Korea and the Art and Industry Biennial, New Zealand and was international artist in residence at Artpace, San Antonio, USA. In 2015, he represented Scotland at the 56th Venice Biennale. His work is part of private collections in London, Glasgow, Edinburgh, New York, San Antonio, New Zealand, Germany, Denmark & Italy.
Accessibility
The Upper Gallery is accessed via lift from the ground floor or via the main staircase.
The exhibition includes a video piece with voice, music and drums, and another bright neon artwork.
Large print versions of exhibition texts are available.
Please let us know if you have any questions or additional requirements, we are working hard to make the gallery as accessible as possible for everyone.
Golden Thread Gallery is supported by:

More Events
Charlotte, Rob, Robin & You: Charlotte Bosanquet, Robin Price & Rob Hilken
HERE & NOW & THEN: POP-UP EXHIBITION
LATE NIGHT ART AT THE GTG
You Will Not Stop Here: Claire Morgan
Exhibition Launch – You Will Not Stop Here: Claire Morgan
Help fund our work
Through a one-off or repeat donation, you’ll enable us to continue showcasing art and culture with our community.