Thinking Time

Selected Artists

United Kingdom
14 May 2020 - 14 November 2020

Thinking Time is a special initiative to support early-career artists to research, reflect, and develop their ideas.

The timely initiative comes in reflection and response to the current state of suspension where production has stalled, and arts institutions around the world have been forced to close; which has brought into focus something that never shuts down: the power and importance of the imagination.

Over the next six months, twenty selected artists will each receive an award of £5,000, as well as mentoring and support.

These artists – who all live and work in the UK – work across the mediums of performance, poetry, choreography, music, video and installation.


Image: Dominique White. Ruttier for the Absent (2019). Installation view, Curva Blu Residency, Italy. Photo: Ilaria Orsini. Courtesy of VEDA Firenze, INCURVA and the artist.

Abbas Zahedi

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Abbas Zahedi

Abbas Zahedi (he/him) is a London based artist. In 2020, he was selected to be part of Artangel's grant and mentorship programme Thinking Time, and in 2023 he'll be taking part in Making Time, the year-long programme on material possibilities.

Abbas is known for his interdisciplinary blend of social practice, performance, installation, moving-image, institution-building, and writing. His practice emerged out of working with migrant and marginalised communities in the UK to explore the concept of neo-diaspora, and the ways in which personal and collective histories interweave.

His recent exhibitions and performances have taken place at South London Gallery, UK; Belmacz, London; Spike Island, Bristol; Whitechapel Gallery, London; Lethaby Gallery, London; clearview.ltd, London; Royal Academy of Arts, London; Wolverhampton Art Gallery, UK; and 57th Venice Biennale, Italy.

Portrait of artist Abbas Zahedi wearing black hoodie with floral print.

Images: (above) Abbas Zahedi photographed in Basement94’s London workshop for the FT by Dan Wilton © Dan Wilton; (left) Abbas Zahedi, How To Make A How From A Why?, 2020. Installation view, South London Gallery. Photo: Andy Stagg.

Abi Palmer

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Abi Palmer

Abi Palmer is an artist and writer. In 2020, she was selected to be part of Artangel's grant and mentorship programme Thinking Time, then in 2023 she created Abi Palmer Invents the Weather in collaboration with her cats, Cha-U-Kao and Lola Lola.

Key works includes Sanatorium (Penned in the Margins, 2020), a fragmented memoir, jumping between luxury thermal pool, and blue inflatable bathtub; and Crip Casino, an interactive gambling arcade parodying the wellness industry and institutionalised spaces. Crip Casino has been exhibited at Tate Modern, Somerset House, Wellcome Collection, and Collective Edinburgh.

Palmer has also been commissioned by Wysing Arts Centre, BBC Radio, Vice News, Wellcome, the Guardian and Shape Arts. In 2021, she was a recipient of the Paul Hamlyn Foundation's Awards for Artists and Sanatorium was shortlisted for the Barbellion Prize.

A photograph of artist Abi Palmer sitting on a backwards chair in a colourful cluttered office

Images: (above) Abi Palmer. Photo by Faith Aylward, styled by Mia Maxwell; (left) Abi Palmer, Crip Casino, 2018. Installation view, London. Photo: Faith Aylward, styled by Mia Maxwell.

Andrew Pierre Hart

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Andrew Pierre Hart

Andrew Pierre Hart is a London-based artist whose practice is inter-disciplinary and focussed on painting. His work explores the symbiotic relationship between sound and painting. Andrew's practice is an ongoing rhythmic research and play of improvised and spontaneous generative processes, through various mediums including sound, video, performance, found object and image, language, photography and installation. Andrews's current work explores themes of spatiality, visualisation, synchronisation, and re-interpretations of DJ technology through painting, sound and installation. He also shares a curatorial practice where he organises events that socially engage artists and viewers.

Andrew is a 2019 Tiffany and Co Outset studio prize winner. The artist has performed at 'Collective Intamacy' at 180 The Strand in 2019; at Yamamoto Keiko Rochaix Gallery in Whitechapel as part of the exhibition 'Nocturnal Creatures'; and at 'Up is a Relative Concept' in Fold, London. He will also be presenting a video in Seoul Korea at an artist-run space in May 2020.

A waist high photograph of the artist Andrew Pierre Hart

Images: (above) Andrew Pierre Hart. Photo by Serena Huang; (left) Andrew Pierre Hart, Finding Rhythm in the Space Between Paintings and Things, 2020. Installation view, London. Photo: Andrew Hart. 

Beatrice Dillon

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Beatrice Dillon

Beatrice Dillon is a London-based electronic musician and artist. Her musical work encompasses a nuanced exploration of polyrhythmic drum programming, spatial sound, and interests in process-based systems of logic across both visual and sonic mediums. She studied Fine Art in London, before working on jazz and experimental music programmes for BBC Radio. 

Her solo album ‘Workaround’ fusing computer music, acoustic and bass music was recently released on PAN in 2020 with previous releases on Boomkat Editions, Hessle Audio and Trilogy Tapes. She was a recipient of both the Wysing Arts Centre and Somerset House Studios artist residencies as well as a resident DJ on NTS Radio from 2014-2020. Dillon has collaborated with a wide range of visual artists and musicians, most recently with Tabla virtuoso, Kuljit Bhamra. Recent sound installation and live performances include Lisson Gallery, wwwX Tokyo, Strelka Institute Moscow, MUTEK Buenos Aires and Christian Marclay’s Assembly at Somerset House. 

A black and white waist high photograph of the artist Beatrice Dillon

Images: (above) Beatrice Dillon. Photo by Alex Kurunis; (left) Beatrice Dillon, Christian Marclay's Assembly, 2019. Somerset House London. Photo courtesy Somerset House Studios.

Belinda Zhawi

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Belinda Zhawi

Belinda Zhawi is a Zimbabwean born literary and sound artist based in London. Her work explores Afro-diasporic research & narratives, with a specialised focus on how the literary arts & education can be used as intersectional tools. She was the 2016/17 Institute of Contemporary Arts Associate Poet, the 2019 Serpentine Galleries’ Schools Artist in Residence & co-founder of, literary arts platform, BORN::FREE.

The artist experiments with sound as MA.MOYO and frequently collaborates with the growing South London jazz & beat-making scene. She’s been featured on various platforms including Boiler Room, BBC Sounds, Worldwide FM & performed across Europe. Belinda is the author of Small Inheritances (ignitionpress, 2018) and micro-pamphlet, South of South East (Bad Betty Press, 2019).

A waist high photograph of the artist Belinda Zhawi semi-obscured by branches

Images: Belinda Zhawi. Photo by Theo Ndlovu

Carl Gent

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Carl Gent

Carl Gent is from Bexhill-on-sea, UK. The artist's recent work has sought to re-historicise and re-fictionalise the life of Cynethryth (the eighth-century Queen of Mercia). In 2019 Carl collaborated with artist Linda Stupart to produce All Us Girls Have Been Dead for So Long, a feature-length musical commissioned by the ICA as a part of their live programme for I, I, I, I, I, I, I, Kathy Acker. The musical followed the narrative structure of the 1990s video game Ecco the Dolphin by featuring a host of other protagonists including Naomi Klein's reportage of the BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill, Margaret Cavendish's 1666 proto-SciFi novel The Blazing World, Westlife's cover of Seasons in the Sun, and Kathy Acker herself.

They are currently working on a new publication expanding on their manufacture of absinthe that occurred at KELDER during 2017’s exhibition Multiplex, and a collaboration with singer and researcher Kelechi Anucha looking into the passage of English folk music into church song. This collaboration is occurring across a residency hosted by Wysing Arts Centre during 2020 and a series of interventions and performances at The Museum of English Rural Life in 2021. They will also be continuing their research into the life of Cynethryth during a research project based at Jupiter Woods in SE London throughout 2020. Carl also recently exhibited and performed at David Dale Gallery, Glasgow; ICA, London; De La Warr Pavilion, Bexhill-on-sea and for Transmissions, episode 2.

A head and shoulders portrait of the artist Carl Gent with hand on face

Images: (above) Carl Gent; (left) Carl Gent, In Praise of Scratching (with James Arguile), 2019. Detail view. Photo courtesy the artist.

Cécile B. Evans

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Cécile B Evans

Cécile B Evans is an American-Belgian artist living and working in London. The artist's work examines the value of emotion and its rebellion as it comes into contact with ideological, physical, and technological structures. They are currently working on a new performance commission for the MOVE festival at Centre Pompidou Paris (FR).

Recent selected solo exhibitions include 49 Nord 6 Est - Frac Lorraine (FR), Museum Abteiberg (DE), Tramway (UK), Chateau Shatto (US), Museo Madre (IT). Their films have been screened in festivals such as the New York Film Festival and Rotterdam International. Public collections include The Museum of Modern Art, New York (US), The Rubell Family Collection, Miami (US), Whitney Museum of American Art (US), De Haallen (NL), Castello di Rivoli, Turin (IT). 

A head and shoulders portrait of the artist Cecile B Evans

Images: (above) Cécile B. Evans. Photo by Yuri Pattison; (left) Cécile B Evans, A Screen Test for an Adaptation of Giselle, 2019. Still image from video. Photo courtesy the artist.

Dominique White

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Dominique White

Dominique White weaves together the theories of Black Subjectivity, Afro-pessimism and Afro-futurism with the nautical myths of Black Diaspora, into a term she defines as the Shipwreck(ed) - a reflexive verb and state of being. Her sculptures demonstrate how Black life could extend beyond its own subjective limits and act as beacons or vessels of an ignored civilisation defined as the Stateless - a realm in which the past, present and future have converged into a Black Future.

Dominique's research reaches back to the sound of Detroit's techno scene, where she continues to reference Afrofuturist narratives (situated in space and underwater) depicted by Aux 88 (Tom Tom and Keith Tucker), DJ Stingray (Sherard Ingram) and Drexciya (Gerald Donald and James Stinson). Her research also extends beyond the tangible, with a curiosity for both the destruction and mythicism that hurricanes in the Caribbean leave in their eternally transformative wake in the sea. Her visual vocabulary extends from nautical motifs such as destroyed sails, damaged hand-woven nets, mutilated anchors and soluble nautical buoys to volatile materials such as palm fronds, raffia, and kaolin clay. She utilises this forceful unification as a means of forcefully dissociating the motifs from their original function and redefining them as bodies charged with retaliation and resilience. These works, or bodies, delicately balance the states of preservation, decay, and destruction whilst emanating the sense that an event has/will/will never take place at any time.

Recent presentations include: Fugitive of the State(less) [solo] at VEDA Firenze (2019), Art-O-Rama [solo] (2019), Abandon(ed) Vessel [solo] at KevinSpace (2019), Boundary + Gesture at Wysing Arts Centre (2019), and Paris Internationale [duo] (2019). Dominique also was the artist-in-residence at Sagrada Mercancía (Chile) in February and March 2020, and was scheduled to be in residency at Triangle France - Astérides (France) from April to late July 2020.

A black and white waist high photograph of the artist Dominique White

Images: (above) Dominique White; (left) Dominique White, Ruttier for the Absent, 2019. Installation view as part of the Curva Blu Residency in Favignana, Italy. Photo: Ilaria Orsini. Courtesy of VEDA Firenze, INCURVA and the artist.

Fabienne Hess

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Fabienne Hess

Fabienne Hess is a London-based Swiss artist. She graduated from the Royal College of Art in 2012 and has since shown her work, among other places, at Talbot Rice Gallery, Edinburgh; Art Night, Serpentine Galleries, French Riviera, London; MK Gallery, Milton Keynes; Baltic, Newcastle and Dakar Biennale.

She has also published an artist book with Common Editions and has received commissions from LUX artists’ moving image, the University of Edinburgh and the BBC.

The artists Fabienne Hess is standing up and taking a photograph of their reflection on a tinted mirror placed on the floor

Images: (above) Fabienne Hess; (left) Fabienne Hess, Detail from the Unravelled Series, 2019. Billboard installation. Photo: Julien Bader.

Himali Singh Soin

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Himali Singh Soin

Himali Singh Soin works across text, performance, and moving image. She utilises metaphors from the natural environment to construct speculative cosmologies that reveal non-linear entanglements between human and non-human life. Her poetic methodology explores the myriad ways of knowing, from scientific to intuitional, indigenous, and alchemical processes. Outer space is often used as a place from which to navigate alien distances and earthly intimacy, rewiring ideas of nativism, nationality, nihilism, and cultural flight.

The artist's inspirations include the ancient Stoics and contemporary literature, travel diaries, and ancient diagrams. By manipulating semiotic flows, she creates conditions for the observation of microstructures of social and geo-poetic time. In the face of extinction, her work insists on resurgence.

A side profile photograph of artist Himali Singh Soins face covered by a clear helmet

Images: (above) Himali Singh Soin. Photo by JJ Weihl ; (left) Himali Singh Soin, we are opposite like that, 2020. Performance still. Photo courtesy BLOCK UNIVERSE.

Jamie Crewe

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Jamie Crewe

Jamie Crewe is a beautiful bronze figure with a polished cocotte's head who grew up in the Peak District and is now settled in Glasgow. They graduated from Sheffield Hallam University in 2009 with a BA in Contemporary Fine Art, and later from Glasgow School of Art in 2015 with a Master of Fine Art. They have presented several solo exhibitions: 'Solidarity & Love', Humber Street Gallery, Hull (2020); 'Love & Solidarity', Grand Union, Birmingham (2020); 'Pastoral Drama', Tramway, Glasgow (2018); 'Female Executioner', Gasworks, London (2017); and 'But what was most awful was a girl who was singing', Transmission, Glasgow (2016). Their work has also been presented as part of 'I, I, I, I, I, I, I Kathy Acker' at the Institute of Contemporary Arts, London; as part of the 'KW Production Series' at Julia Stoschek Collection, Berlin; as part of the Glasgow International 2018 Director’s Programme in the group show 'Cellular World' at GoMA, Glasgow; and as part of the 'Artists’ Moving Image Festival 2016' at Tramway, Glasgow.

In 2019 the artist was awarded the tenth Margaret Tait Award with the resulting commissioned work 'Ashley' premiering at Glasgow Film Festival in March 2020.

A mirror reflected photograph of the artist Jamie Crewe from the knee high that is blurred

Images: (above) Jamie Crewe; (left) Jamie Crewe, “Morton” – “Beedles” – “An abyss”, 2020. Still image from video. Courtesy of the artist.

Jay Bernard

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Jay Bernard

Jay Bernard (FRSL FRSA) is a writer from London. Their work is interdisciplinary, critical, queer, and rooted in the archive. They won the 2018 Ted Hughes Award for Surge: Side A, a cross-disciplinary exploration of the New Cross Fire in 1981.

Jay’s short film Something Said has screened in the UK and internationally, including Aesthetica and Leeds International Film Festival (where it won best experimental and best queer short respectively), Sheffield DocFest and CinemAfrica. Jay is a programmer at BFI Flare, an archivist at Mayday Rooms and resident artist at Raven Row. Their first collection, Surge, is out with Chatto and Windus in 2019.

In 2020 Jay was selected to be a part of Thinking Time, an initiative that supported early-career artists to research, reflect, and develop their ideas.

A black and white waist high photograph of the artist Jay Bernard

Images: (above) Jay Bernard. Photo by Joshua Virasami; (left) Jay Bernard. Photo courtesy of Speaking Volumes.

Jos Bitelli

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Jos Bitelli

Jos Bitelli works collaboratively and collectively across film, TV, and publishing as an artist, producer, and live-director.

Recent projects include 'Patricide: The End of a 60 Year-Old-Mistake,' a zine that looks at the continued dismantling of the NHS which was published in 2018 alongside a National Portfolio commission at Nottingham Contemporary. Jos is also a co-founding member of the artist collective East London Cable (ELC) which aims to make the TV it wants to see in the world.

A head and shoulders portrait of the artist Jos Bitelli taken with a filter that displays text over their forehead which reads if you don't let us dream we won't let you sleep

Images: (above) Jos Bitelli; (left) Jos Bitelli, The Procedure, 2018. Production view, Nottingham Contemporary. Photo: Hanna Parikh.

Libita Sibungu

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Libita Sibungu

Libita Sibungu lives and works in Bristol, UK. Her ongoing body of work ‘Quantum Ghost’ has toured in its first iteration as a solo exhibition and major new commission at both Gasworks and Spike Island, UK (2019), supported by the Freelands Foundation and Arts Council England. Comprising large scale photograms and a multi-channel audio installation, the work speaks to Sibungu’s British-Namibian heritage.

The artist's recent works have been presented at; Cabaret Voltaire, Zurich and Somerset House, London, (2019); Dyson Gallery, Royal College of Art, London; Whitstable Biennale; Eastside Projects, Birmingham (all UK) and Kalashnikovv Gallery, Johannesburg (2018); South London Gallery; Victoria and Albert Museum, London and Diaspora Pavilion - 57th Venice Biennale (2017). Sibungu is also a recent recipient of the; Creative Development Grant, Arts Council England (2019-2020), and the Triangle Network Fellowship, Bagfactory, Johannesburg (2018). 

A photograph taken of the artist Libita Sibungu during a performance with arms raised holding a foil blanket

Images: (above) Libita Sibungu; (left) Libita Sibungu, Quantum Ghost, 2019. Installation view, Gasworks, London. Photo: Andy Keate.

Lucinda Chua

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Lucinda Chua

Lucinda Chua was born in the UK and has English, Malaysian, and ancestral Chinese roots. Starting from the early age of three, she learned piano and cello by ear under the Suzuki method, which aims to create an environment for learning music that parallels the linguistic process of acquiring a native language. With an interest in storytelling and visual narrative, Lucinda studied photography at Nottingham Trent University, where she continued to write, produce and perform music.

The artist debuted her solo release “Antidotes 1” in 2019, flexing seamlessly between introspective pop songs and other-worldly soundscapes. Bringing this material to life in a one-woman cello show, she has performed at festivals, music venues and art spaces in the UK and Europe, where she approaches the room and everyone in it as her instrument.

A black and white waist high photograph of the artist Lucinda Chua with angel wings strapped to her back

Images: (above) Lucinda Chua; (left) Lucinda Chua, Feel Something, 2019. Still image from video. Photo courtesy the artist & NTS.

Maeve Brennan

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Maeve Brennan

Maeve Brennan is an artist and filmmaker based in London. Her practice explores the political and historical resonance of material and place. Working primarily with moving image, as well as installation, sculpture, and printed matter, she develops long-term investigations led by personal encounters. Adopting a documentary approach, Maeve gains intimacy and proximity with her subjects; producing complex and layered accounts that disrupt dominant representations. With a particular focus on forms of expertise that encompass an associated physical practice – geologists, archaeologists, architects, mechanics, embroiderers – her works excavate the multiple narratives latent in material itself.

Recent exhibitions include Chisenhale Gallery, London; Spike Island, Bristol and The Whitworth, University of Manchester. Her films have screened at International Film Festival Rotterdam; FILMADRID; Sheffield Doc Fest and Sonic Acts, Amsterdam. She received the Jerwood/FVU Award 2018 and is the Stanley Picker Art & Design Fellow (2019–21).

A knee high photograph of artist Maeve Brennan

Images: (above) Maeve Brennan. Photo by Amy Gwatkin; (left) Maeve Brennan, The Goods, 2018. KUB Billboards, Kunsthaus Bregenz. Photo: Markus Tretter.

Oona Doherty

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Oona Doherty

Oona Doherty is a Northern Irish artist who works in dance, performance, and film. She studied contemporary dance at the London School of Contemporary Dance, University of Ulster and Laban, where she holds bachelor and postgraduate degrees from. Oona has performed for companies such as T.R.A.S.H (N.L) Abbattoir Ferme (B.E) United Fall (I.E) Enda Walsh (I.E). She has collaborated in the performance and direction of videos for Rubber Bandits – Sonny, Divis - BBC 2, Girl Band- shoulder blades, Jamie XX – I don’t know and Welcome to a bright white Limbo Cara Holmes – Jury mention at Tribeca NYC.

Her Choreographies include Hope hunt & the ascension into Lazarus, 2016 (winning of the Dublin fringe best performer award, Edinburgh fringe total theatre award, Reconnaissance audience 1st place, judges 1st place); Hard to be Soft a Belfast prayer, 2017 (winner of the Best dance show of 2019 by the Guardian newspaper); and Lady Magma the birth of a cult, 2019. Meanwhile, her visual art exhibitions include 'Death of the hunter Installation', shown at the Golden Thread Gallery in Belfast, LOTHRINGER13 HALLE in Munich, ADC Gallery in Geneva and Centre Pompidou kanal in Brussels.

A knee high photograph of artist Oona Doherty

Images: (above) Oona Doherty. Photo: Luca Truffarelli ; (left) Oona Doherty, Hard to be Soft, 2017. Photo: Luca Truffarelli.

Paul Maheke

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Paul Maheke

Paul Maheke was born in Brive-la-Gaillarde, France and lives and works in London, UK. Since studying at ENSA Paris-Cergy, Paris and Open School East, London, Maheke’s works and performances have been shown at Tate Modern, London (2017), the 57th Venice Biennale (Diaspora Pavilion, 2017), Centre Pompidou, Paris (2018), Lafayette Anticipations, Paris (2018), Baltic Triennial, Tallinn (2018), Manifesta, Palermo (2018). In 2018 the Chisenhale Gallery in London hosted a solo exhibition of his work, which later travelled to Vleeshal CCA, Middelburg in January 2019. In 2019 his performances were shown at the 58th Venice Biennale and at ICA Miami in addition to a solo exhibition at Triangle France, Marseille.

Through primarily dance and a collaborative practice comprising performance, installation, sound and video, Maheke considers the potential of the body as an archive in order to examine how memory and identity are formed and constituted.

Paul Maheke was also part of Artangel's programme Thinking Time, 2020. 


Images: (above) Paul Maheke; (left) Paul Maheke, Melika Ngombe Kolongo (Nkisi) & Ariel Efraim Ashbel Sènsa, 2019. Performance, Performa 19 Biennial, New York. Photo: Paula Court.

Rosalie Schweiker

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Rosalie Schweiker

Rosalie Schweiker works across a wide range of media, including organising, print, education and social practice. If you are encountering the work, it’s likely that you’re not looking at it, but sitting on it, eating it, using it. Together with friends and colleagues Rosalie turned a gallery into a bra shop for DD+ sizes, co-organised a migrant-led activation day against the hostile environment, and tested participatory budgeting processes with a new housing development. She embraces the complexity of this way of working, pushing to challenge happy one-liner narratives and linear outcomes. This work needs conflict and compromise, it thrives on interdependence and solidarity.

In short, Rosalie is a mince, not a sausage artist. Every year she comes up with terms & conditions to help navigate the wrongness of the art worlds - this year's t&c is NO and Sophie Chapman kindly tattooed it on her elbow. It's been difficult for her to enforce it, but there are still a few months left. Les Reines Prochaines said: 'Thinking alone is criminal' and so Rosalie is going to share this (Artangel's) Thinking Time with all the amazing people around her, from Rabbits Road Press to Independendents United, AND publishing, Keep It Complex and Migrants In Culture. The artist is also a big fan of Company Drinks, Europa design studio, Idle Women, Joon Lynn Goh, Arawelo Eats, Sahra Hersi, Rose Nordin, Eva Weinmayr, Glengall Wharf Community Garden, Margherita Huntley, Mirjam Bayerdoerfer, Jean Joseph, Rachel Littlewood, Lisa Rahman, Sadie St.Hilaire, Kerri Jefferis, Amy Pennington, Tracky Crombie, Eleanor Vonne Brown, Sofia Niazi, Heiba Lamara, Sophie Mallett, Sarah Jury, Emma Edmondson, Aleesha Nandhra and all the other people she can't name because of the word count. She thanks Sophie Le Roux for taking the distant digital body shots. 

A photograph of the artist Rosalie Schweiker on a smart phone screen

Images: (above) Rosalie Schweiker; (left) Sophie Le Roux and Rosalie Schweiker, distant digital body shot, 2020. Suffolk countryside and South London. Photo: Sophie Le Roux.

Press

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Visual artists are struggling to produce work and concentrate on projects along with the rest of the population...This gives hope. It’s not just about money, it is someone putting faith in you in these incredibly uncertain times – Dame Rachel Whiteread, quoted in the Guardian

Selected Press

Visual artists are struggling to produce work and concentrate on projects along with the rest of the population...This gives hope. It’s not just about money, it is someone putting faith in you in these incredibly uncertain times. – Dame Rachel Whiteread, quoted by Mark Brown, The Guardian, 14 May 2020
Through a combination of financial support and mentoring, the programme aims to turn this potentially fallow period into a useful creative phase for selected early-career artists. – Monocle, 18 May 2020

Credits

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Who made this possible?

Credits

Thinking Time is an Artangel initiative with the support of the Freelands Foundation.   

With thanks to the Artists for Artangel Fund and Guardian Angels.

Artangel is generously supported using public funding by Arts Council England, and by the private patronage of The Artangel International CircleSpecial Angels and The Company of Angels. 


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Back stage view of a set with camera operators and a stage split in two with people seated on sofas on either side of a separating wall