b. 1958, Dublin, Ireland.
Intimate in tone and subject matter, Kathy Prendergast’s practice combines drawing, sculpture and installation. What might appear minimal or elusive at first glance can encompass a complex web of emotional, personal and political resonances. Proximate to the body and connecting subjective reflections on the world, her work explores a potent cluster of issues including power, identity, landscape, memory, geography, and family. A connection between the body and landscape, often manifested through mapping, can be traced back to the beginning of her practice. Often using redaction or removal as a device, creating negative space through black ink, coloured paint or white paper, the artist erases or overwrites geographic expressions of power. Prendergast points out the subjectivity of maps, their inherent colonialism, and the ultimate fragility of borders and territories over time. Though delicate, fragile and usually on a human scale, her works also point towards the infinite – suggesting the vastness of space or the constellations of the sky. Prendergast’s work is methodical – the product of slow, repetitive processes requiring patience, precision and devotion. Faithful to mark-making, drawing and hand-crafting as well as the revelatory potential of sparking unfamiliar connections with everyday objects, her work is enigmatic, eerily beautiful and emotionally resonant.
Kathy Prendergast lives and works in London.
Kathy Prendergast’s solo exhibitions include Tate Britain, Camden Arts Centre, and Southbank Centre in London; Nottingham Contemporary, UK; Kunst-Station St. Peter, Cologne; the Irish Museum of Modern Art; Douglas Hyde Gallery, Dublin; Crawford Art Gallery, Cork. She has also exhibited at PS1 and the Drawing Centre, New York; Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo; the ICA, Boston; Chicago Cultural Centre, Chicago; Contemporary Art Museum, St Louis; Chisenhale Gallery, and the Royal Geographic Society, London; MoMA Oxford; Kettle's Yard, Cambridge; Arnolfini, Bristol; Yorkshire Sculpture Park; Turner Contemporary, Margate; The Hugh Lane Gallery and the RHA, Dublin; Limerick City Gallery, Limerick; The Model, Sligo; Turku Art Museum, Turku; Amos Anderson Art Museum, Helsinki; Centre Culturel Irlandais, Paris; Berardo Museum, Lisbon; Museum Morsbroich, Germany; and Shanghai Art Museum, Shanghai. Biennales and repeating exhibitions include EVA International; the British Art Show; the 13th and 14th Sydney Biennales and the Yokohama Triennale. In 1995, Prendergast represented Ireland at the 46th Venice Biennale and won the prestigious Premio 2000 (Best Young Artist).
Public collections include Tate, London; the Cheekwood Museum of Art, Nashville; Santa Barbara University Museum; the Albright-Knox, Buffalo; the Contemporary Museum, Honolulu; The Hugh Lane, Dublin & Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin.
Gerard Byrne and Kathy Prendergast are both exhibited in Pruːf, a group exhibition curated by Sarah Pierce at the Library Project in Temple Bar.
Dorothy Cross and Kathy Prendergast are both in A Matter of Time, a major group exhibition at Crawford Art Gallery, Cork from 17 February – 3 June 2024.
This major touring exhibition challenges the male-dominated narratives of post-war British sculpture by presenting a diverse and significant range of ambitious work by women.
Work by Kathy Prendergast is included in Earth: Digging Deep in British Art 1781-2022, a major exhibition spanning four centuries of artwork.
Work by Kathy Prendergast will be included in Breaking the Mould: Sculpture by Women since 1945, a touring exhibition starting at The Box and The Levinsky Gallery at the University of Plymouth.