The Breakery
When
Sat, 19 July 2025 - Fri, 15 August 2025
thursdays, fridays and saturdays
Where
no31 - 29 Newtown street, Duns, TD11 3AS
Further info
Cost: free
The BreakeryType: Exhibition

Kevin Harman, studio assemblage - untitled
The exhibition presents a dialogue between the conceptual, text-based practices of Lily Ashrowan, John Ayscough and Kevin Harman. The artists have in common a freedom of interdisciplinary experimentation, moving seamlessly between formats and forms that meet the needs of the artwork. They share an intention and urgency in their practice, demanding that what they witness must be addressed.
Lily Ashrowan is an emerging artist based between the rural Scottish Borders and London and these disparate geographies inform her work. Working across moving image, photography, writing and performance, she draws from personal experience and histories including: rural landscapes, platonic intimacy, urban disillusionment, familial history, generational trauma, queer sex and nightlife to think through political desire and materialist histories. Her artwork is a poignant exploration of memory and identity, engaging directly with the often uneasy space between personal and political consciousness.
John Ayscough is a conceptual and performative artist. By looking directly into the headwind of injustice and inhumanity, he creates artwork that acts as a sometimes explosive, visual polemic against the iniquity of power and control. He works largely in the moment, reacting spontaneously to specific news material and cultural constructs. His politically motivated art uses trans-media and guerrilla tactics in public spaces and deploys engagement techniques appropriated from advertising and marketing.
Kevin Harman is a contemporary artist known for his provocative and performative works that often highlight social issues and urban depravation. The role of the viewer as participant in the artwork is significant to Kevin. By physically and conceptually engaging us in his artwork as a made thing, he then also asks that we reflect on our subjective culpability. He has the remarkable ability to make work that is both a joyful emersion in subtlety of an idea, and at the same time a visually powerful and often beautiful artwork.
Posted by: no31 gallery