Now Open

GBA 2025 Winners Exhibition at The Art House, Wakefield

Amanda Cornish, Beverley Duckworth, Bo-Yi Wu, Emmanuel Awuni, Lucy Mulholland, Madeleine Ruggi, Regan Boyce, Salvatore Pione, Stephen Burke, Yidan Kim

Mar 21 – May 6

The Royal Society Of Sculptors
Museum

The Royal Society Of Sculptors

Dora House, 108 Old Brompton Rd, South SW7 3RA

Currently closed until summer 2026 for building works; Sculpture Terrace at 108 Old Brompton Road continues to operate

Admission

🎁

Free Admission

Tickets from Free

About

The Art House continued the growing partnership with the Royal Society of Sculptors , welcoming the Gilbert Bayes Award 2025 Winners Exhibition to Wakefield . Wakefield holds a celebrated reputation as a city of sculpture, making it the perfect home for this exciting showcase of emerging talent. This year's exhibition features an inspiring collection of works by the 2025 Gilbert Bayes Award winners, offering a glimpse into some of the most exciting sculptural practices today. The Gilbert Bayes Award, presented annually by the Royal Society of Sculptors, is designed to support early-career artists during the often challenging transition from study to professional practice. Open to sculptors of all backgrounds, ages, and training levels, the award encourages experimentation and creative risk-taking. Generously supported by the Gilbert Bayes Charitable Trust, this initiative plays a vital role in nurturing new talent in contemporary sculpture. Curated by Freeny Yianni founder of CLOSE Gallery, this year's exhibition brings together an impressive group of artists: Amanda Cornish , Beverley Duckworth , Bo-Yi Wu , Emmanuel Awuni , Lucy Mulholland , Madeleine Ruggi , Regan Boyce, Salvatore Pione , Stephen Burke , and Yidan Kim . Freeny's chosen theme is Terraforming Futures: Sculpture, sustainability, and the shifting balance of nature and will explore how sculptors engage with urgent ecological questions , from material reuse and up cycling to speculative visions of post-climate-change landscapes. The idea of terraforming reflects both the destructive reshaping of Earth through human activity and the possibility of artists re-imagining new, more balanced worlds.

Tags

sculpturecontemporaryaward winnersemerging artists
View on Website
Back to Exhibitions

Explore More in London