Nick Hornby (b.1980) is a British artist living and working in London. A graduate of the Slade School of Art and Chelsea College of Art, he is known for his monumental site-specific works that combine digital software with traditional materials such as bronze, steel, granite, and marble. His work has been exhibited at Tate Britain, Southbank Centre London, Leighton House London, CASS Sculpture Foundation, Glyndebourne, Fitzwilliam Museum Cambridge, Museum of Arts and Design New York, and Poznan Biennale, Poland. Residencies include Outset (Israel) and Eyebeam (USA), and awards include the UAL Sculpture Prize. His work has been reviewed in the New York Times, frieze, Artforum, The Art Newspaper, The FT, and featured in Architectural Digest and Sculpture Magazine.
Hannah Higham is Senior Curator of Collections and Research at the Henry Moore Foundation. She holds an MA from the Courtauld Institute, London, and a PhD from the University of Birmingham. Her academic interests encompass not only modern and contemporary sculpture but also that of sixteenth-century Florence.
Dr Helen Pheby is Associate Director, Programme, at Yorkshire Sculpture Park. Offsite projects include A Place in Time (2016) at NIROX Sculpture Park in the UNESCO Cradle of Humankind, South Africa, and the Kyiv Sculpture Project (2012). She is co-investigator on an AHRC funded project at the University of York, Centre for Applied Human Rights.
Matt Price is a London-based arts publisher, editor, and writer. He has published approaching fifty books and catalogues under his Anomie imprints, and edited publications for other publishers including Phaidon, Rizzoli, Thames & Hudson, and Hatje Cantz. He has compiled and written two volumes of The Anomie Review of Contemporary British Painting.
Luke Syson is Director of the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge. From 2012–19 he oversaw the USA’s largest collection of European applied arts and sculpture at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Formerly the Curator of Italian Painting before 1500 and Head of Research at the National Gallery, London, he began his career at the British Museum and the V&A.