‘All the Islands of all the Oceans’, as a body of work was begun in 2001 and made continuously until 2006, including throughout a two-year Henry Moore fellowship at the University of the West of England (UWE) that was awarded in 2004. Focusing on drawing and mapping landscapes, ‘All the Islands of all the Oceans’ records imaginary and existing islands. The initial sequence of drawings entitled ‘British Isles’ mapped every isle or rock separate from the main body of the landmass that is known as the British Isles. Developing this further, Kovats extended the concept to become ‘All of the Islands of all of the Oceans’ and documented the Islands in the Pacific Ocean using the Times Atlas as her source. She then further expanded this to inc...
International audienceIn the endless world of maps, Island maps have a special charm. Five artists, ...
Drawing on examples of installation, film, photography, and performance, this essay explores the sig...
Since the earliest of times, islands have captured the artistic imagination—and, often, for the arti...
Kovats’ epic installation All the Sea (2012 – cont) is a stunningly beautiful and poetic w...
‘All the Seas’ was a large sculptural work arising from Kovats’s extended research into our relation...
All the Canals (2017) comprises a single glass vessel containing water mixed together from each of t...
A multipart set of drawings, of 36 individually framed works, where each framed work contains up to ...
‘Oceans’, a solo show by Tania Kovats (b. 1966 Brighton), is the second exhibition at the Hestercomb...
Ever since Crusoe was cast away, distant islands have been scattered across our collective imaginati...
Exhibition Dates: 15 March – 25 May 2014Venue: The Fruitmarket Gallery, EdinburghBritish artist Tani...
Something about the apparent romanticism of islands prompts creative reflections such as those compr...
A highlight of the exhibition is All the Sea, an ambitious new work which presents water from all th...
This work extends my engagement with site into a geo-political context, and is the outcome of an int...
Drawing Water is a collection of drawings and writings brought together by artist Tania Kovats. Beli...
The sequence comprised large-scale photographs of constructed dioramas tracing a fictional location ...
International audienceIn the endless world of maps, Island maps have a special charm. Five artists, ...
Drawing on examples of installation, film, photography, and performance, this essay explores the sig...
Since the earliest of times, islands have captured the artistic imagination—and, often, for the arti...
Kovats’ epic installation All the Sea (2012 – cont) is a stunningly beautiful and poetic w...
‘All the Seas’ was a large sculptural work arising from Kovats’s extended research into our relation...
All the Canals (2017) comprises a single glass vessel containing water mixed together from each of t...
A multipart set of drawings, of 36 individually framed works, where each framed work contains up to ...
‘Oceans’, a solo show by Tania Kovats (b. 1966 Brighton), is the second exhibition at the Hestercomb...
Ever since Crusoe was cast away, distant islands have been scattered across our collective imaginati...
Exhibition Dates: 15 March – 25 May 2014Venue: The Fruitmarket Gallery, EdinburghBritish artist Tani...
Something about the apparent romanticism of islands prompts creative reflections such as those compr...
A highlight of the exhibition is All the Sea, an ambitious new work which presents water from all th...
This work extends my engagement with site into a geo-political context, and is the outcome of an int...
Drawing Water is a collection of drawings and writings brought together by artist Tania Kovats. Beli...
The sequence comprised large-scale photographs of constructed dioramas tracing a fictional location ...
International audienceIn the endless world of maps, Island maps have a special charm. Five artists, ...
Drawing on examples of installation, film, photography, and performance, this essay explores the sig...
Since the earliest of times, islands have captured the artistic imagination—and, often, for the arti...