Beth Cullen-Kerridge
Beth Cullen-Kerridge is an English sculptor.
She was born in 1970 in Stoke on Trent to parents Judith Vincent, a businesswoman, James Cullen, a painter. She attended John Moores University (Ref John Moores University website Alumni page) and the Royal College of Art. Her work was subsequently shown in two of the London Parks.[1]
Her work has been shown in exhibitions England including specifically-made sculptures for her home town of Stoke on Trent. She has worked as an assistant in foundries producing works for Eduardo Paolozzi, Elisabeth Frink, Alberto Giacometti and Sir Anthony Caro. < Ref -The Last Judgement Sculpture by Anthony Caro - Venice Biennale - Catalogue published by Verlag Paul Swiridoff - Special thanks Beth Cullen Preface pg 3 >
In 2004 Cullen-Kerridge moved to Norfolk to work on property renovation, for which she had a fondness. A year later she moved to Marlow in Buckinghamshire to develop and open a gastropub, The Hand and Flowers with her husband, chef Tom Kerridge.[2] They were able to purchase the pub with the help of money she had received for a sculpture commission for a roundabout in Stoke.[3]
Cullen-Kerridge subsequently gave up producing sculpture for a number of years while she developed the business.[4]
Cullen-Kerridge travelled to Carrara in 2010, to study marble carving with artisans there. [5]
She had an exhibition at Hoxton Arches, Hoxton, East London in 2014. Works included a formal shirt on a crucifix called "Hung out to Dry".
Her sculptures also include a shirt torso with a shark fin protruding from the back.[4] She exhibited at Gallery Different in Percy Street, London in Oct 2015. [6]
References
- ↑ CASS Foundation Archived 19 November 2015 at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ Caroline Davies (6 October 2011) "Hand & Flowers becomes first pub to win two Michelin stars", theguardian.com. Retrieved 25 October 2015.
- ↑ Art Architecture and Sculpture, Fiona Waterhouse,George Noszlopy, Paperback,Series: Public Sculpture of Britain)
- 1 2 Dalya Alberge (25 September 2014) "Beth Cullen show tilts at ‘suits’ who failed to finance Tom Kerridge venture", theguardian.com. Retrieved 25 October 2015.
- ↑ Tim Adams (16 November 2014) "Beth Cullen Kerridge and Tom Kerridge: art, food and the trouble with bankers", The Guardian. Retrieved 2 October 2016.
- ↑ http://www.gallerydifferent.co.uk/exhibitions/supersuits