Nigel Kingsbury: The Meeting Place of Unveiled Worlds

A white, male artist draws with black pencil on white paper hung against a blank white wall. Several other wispy, abstract pencil drawings are hung as well in the studio.

ActionSpace artist Nigel Kingsbury exhibits in The Meeting Place of Unveiled Worlds at at Tokyo Shibuya Koen-dori Gallery.

 

21 June – 31 August 2025
Open Tuesday – Sunday, 11 am – 7 pm
Private view: Friday 20 June, time tbc
Tokyo Shibuya Koen-dori Gallery, Galleries 1 and 2, Interactive Space
Shibuya Workers’ Welfare Hall 1F, 1-19-8 Jinnan, Shibuya-kuTokyo, 150-0041Japan
Free Admission

We’re pleased to share that the work of ActionSpace artist Nigel Kingsbury (1949 – 2016) is included in The Meeting Place of Unveiled Worlds, a new international group exhibition curated by Jennifer Gilbert at Tokyo Shibuya Koen-dori Gallery.

The exhibition brings together eleven artists from across the UK, showcasing a range of creative practices and approaches. Nigel’s delicate pencil drawings feature in the first gallery space, alongside works by Tirzah Mileham, Madge Gill, Cathy Ward, Cara Macwilliam, Terence Wilde and Andrew Johnston.

The second space features vivid and colourful works by Jesse James Nagel, Cameron Morgan, Valerie Potter and Scottie Wilson.

Nigel Kingsbury developed a deeply personal artistic language over many years, capturing quiet strength and beauty through line and abstraction. We’re honoured to see his work shared with new audiences as part of this thoughtful and imaginative exhibition.

The Meeting Place of Unveiled Worlds is presented in collaboration with the Tokyo Shibuya Koen-dori Gallery, Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo, and Tokyo Metropolitan Foundation for History and Culture.

Supported by British Council.

 

 

Learn more about the exhibition

 

Lead image: Nigel Kingsbury in the ActionSpace studio at Studio Voltaire. Photo courtesy of the artist and ActionSpace.

Following Images: The Meeting Place of Unveiled Worlds, curated by Jennifer Gilbert. Photo credit: KAKISHIMA Tatsuro. Photo courtesy of Tokyo Shibuya Koen-dori Gallery

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