Laura Buckley

Irish video and installation artist (1977–2022) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Laura Buckley (1977–2022) was an Irish video and installation artist, and sculptor. Born in Galway, Ireland, she lived and worked in London.[1] She exhibited throughout the UK and internationally.[2]

Born1977 (1977)
Galway
Died2022 (aged 4445)
KnownforFata Morgana
Quick facts Born, Died ...
Laura Buckley
Born1977 (1977)
Galway
Died2022 (aged 4445)
Alma materNCAD
Chelsea College of Art and Design
Known forFata Morgana
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Early life and education

Buckley was born in County Galway, Ireland and lived in a small town. After graduating from NCAD in Dublin in 2000, she received her MA from Chelsea College of Art and Design in London in 2007.[3][4]

Work

Fata Morgana, a giant kaleidoscope art installation. 2012.

Buckley worked in various digital and video medias including "moving image, kinetics, sound, light, sculpture and digital print".[5] She described to Bomb magazine in 2014 that she had stopped painting and started "painting with light".[4] She hoped her work made people feel: "A connection. Less alone."[6] A Frieze review described her installations as containing eclectic sources "that provided the intricate layers for Buckley’s sound, video and sculptural installations."[7]

Career

Fata Morgana was a "dazzling and disorientating large-scale",[8] walk-in, kaleidoscope installation Buckley made for Cell Project Space in 2012.[9][3] It was shown again in 2019 for a group exhibition titled Kaleidoscope at Saatchi Gallery.[10][6]

Buckley exhibited at Mother's Tankstation in Dublin in 2010,[3] and was part of Into Boundless Space I Leap, an exhibition based on the work of Scottish scientist James Clerk Maxwell at the University of Cambridge in 2016.[11] She also exhibited at Art House – an illegally constructed 'beach house' on a roof in Hackney – in 2016.[12] She collaborated with many artists in exhibitions and performances including Kim Coleman at Block 336 (2016),[13] Paul Purgas at the Whitechapel Gallery (2015),[14] Dan Coopey at Turner Contemporary (2013), and with Dave MacLean and Haroon Mirza at Rokeby (2009).[1]

Her work is in the Zabludowicz Collection.[2]

References

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