
Spanning two dedicated gallery spaces and extending across the 70-acre landscape, our contemporary art programme includes individual and group exhibitions, immersive artist installations and site-specific outdoor works.
ERASURE brings together three international artists - Laís Amaral, Solange Pessoa and Dana Awartani - who address the destruction of the environment, social histories and cultural heritage through their work.
Featuring painting, sculpture, installation and moving image, this poetic exploration of how cultural memory and ecological health are intrinsically bound is held across the Foundation’s gallery spaces.

In conversation with our evolving 70-acre landscape, discover new ways to encounter art, nature and place.
Our Summer Programme unfolds through earthworks, sculpture, tapestry, ceramics and large-scale outdoor installations. Spanning the galleries and landscape, it features works by Nancy Holt, Eva Rothschild, Polly Apfelbaum, Yayoi Kusama, Lee Ufan and Hélio Oiticica.

The headline exhibition of our opening season featured Turner Prize–winning artist Rachel Whiteread (1993), whose sculptures transform everyday objects and spaces into ghostly echoes of the familiar. Three of Whiteread’s works remain installed across the landscape.

Winner of the 2022 Turner Prize and known for her sculptural assemblages that find historical resonances in organic forms. Discover two works by Veronica Ryan, including a new bronze work created in response to the Foundation's stunning natural landscape.

Two sculptures by the late Japanese American artist, Isamu Noguchi (1904-1988) are featured in our landscape. Conceived as tools for exploring nature and human relationships, his sculptures Octetra (three element stack) 1968 (2021) and Fat Dancer (1982-83), demonstrate a fascination with geometry and the interplay between positive and negative space.

Discover a poignant sound work by acclaimed, Berlin based, Scottish artist Susan Philipsz (b.1965), winner of the 2010 Turner Prize. As Many As Will (2015) features singing voices that emerge from trees within the ancient woodland, interweaving and overlapping to create an immersive vocal work with shifting rhythms.

Known for her large scale, witty paintings, containing imagery from mass media, literature and personal memory, Rose Wylie (b.1934) has in recent years also produced painted bronze sculptures. Installed in our landscape, Pale-Pink Pineapple/Bomb (2025), takes as its subject the now commonplace fruit, considered highly exotic and luxurious when first introduced to Europe in the 17th century from South America.

Lubna Chowdhary (b. 1964) works primarily in the field of ceramics, bridging the disciplines of architecture, craft, design, sculpture, and painting. Her presentation will include a selection of ceramic ‘Markers’ and two large-scale collage works from her ‘Switch’ series.

