Art Everywhere: Leading Artists Antony Gormley And Grayson Perry Launched The Largest Outdoor Exhibition in UK

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Leading artists Grayson Perry and Antony Gormley today announced the works which have been chosen by the British public for the UK’s biggest art exhibition, Art Everywhere which will take place on over 30,000 billboards and outdoor sites across the country from 21 July – 31 August 2014.

Over 38,000 votes were received via Facebook (facebook.com/arteverywhereuk) in the process to select the nation’s favourite works which will be shown on bus shelters, underground stations, roadside billboards, motorway services, national rail networks, shopping centres and airports across the UK. 90% of the population will have an opportunity to see a work of art at an outdoor site during the summer. The art will also be shown in a national Art Everywhere on-screen exhibition shown in over 1,000 Vue cinema screens in the UK in August.

As part of today’s launch, Antony Gormley also unveiled a specially-commissioned digital artwork for Art Everywhere which will be available for the public to download for free. The work entitled Feeling Material will be shown on digital poster sites across the UK, including London’s Waterloo Station and Coventry House, Piccadilly Circus, and in Manchester’s Trafford Centre, as well as on motion screens in the back of over 2,000 black cabs. Antony Gormley has also donated 100 signed limited edition works to be gifted to the first 100 supporters contributing £950 or more to Art Everywhere. Funds raised will support the costs of print and production for Art Everywhere to be bigger and better, ensuring works of art reach more poster sites. Both the digital and limited edition works will be available from 16th July until 31 August from arteverywhere.org.uk

The shortlisted works in order of popularity are as below:

David Hockney, My Parents, 1977

Dora Carrington, Farm at Watendlath, 1921

Dame Laura Knight, Ruby Loftus screwing a Breech-ring, 1943

Grayson Perry, The Annunciation of the Virgin Deal, 2012

Stanhope Alexander Forbes, A Fish Sale on a Cornish Beach, 1885

Michael Andrews, Melanie and Me Swimming, 1978-9

George Frederic Watts, Ellen Terry (‘Choosing’), 1864

Augustus Leopold Egg, The Travelling Companions, 1862

Patrick Caulfield, Pottery, 1969

John Hoyland, Memory Mirror, 1981

Rose Wylie, Early Memory Series No.2: Doodle Bug, 1998

Eileen Agar, Slow Movement, 1970

Julia Margaret Cameron, lago (Study from an Italian), 1867

Gilbert & George, Existers, 1984

John Constable, Study of Cirrus Clouds, c.1822

Edward Collier, Trompe l’oeil with Writing Materials, c.1702

Philippe Jacques de Loutherbourg, Coalbrookdale by Night, 1801

Ivon Hitchens, A River Pool, 1951

Henry Moore, King and Queen, 1952-3, cast 1957

Hans Holbein the Younger, A Lady with a Squirrel and a Starling (Anne Lovell?), 1526-8

William Blake, The Circle of the Lustful, 1824-7

Gillian Wearing, Signs that say what you want them to say and not Signs that say what someone else wants you to say I’M DESPERATE, 1992-1993

Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger, Queen Elizabeth I (‘The Ditchley portrait’), c.1592

Ben Nicholson, 1940-42 (two forms), 1940-42

Marc Quinn, Self, 2006