يحاول ذهب - حر
In The Studio With Annie Morris
March 2024
|Robb Report Singapore
Between multiple shows across three continents—not to mention a home renovation—the British artist has a lot to do.
-

ANNIE MORRIS is talking a mile a minute over Zoom, routinely interrupting herself midsentence, or even mid-word, as she paces non-stop through her East London studio. “I never sit down,” she admits, holding her phone aloft.
Her husband, artist Idris Khan, whose studio occupies the same former toy-factory building as hers, pops into the screen and vouches for her ambulatory habit. “People follow her around the studio,” he says.
That space is now a forest of richly hued plaster sculptures, the latest in Morris’s long-running series of totemic towers of misshapen spheres she calls Stacks. The orbs appear to teeter on top of one another in ways that defy physics (a hidden steel pole impaling the pieces enables that bit of magic). “It’s a really, really busy studio. I can barely walk around,” she says. “And I have to clear some space because I’m going to be doing some drawings.” Somehow, though, she finds the workshop has “a nice calm to it”.
Morris is probably well served by her inability to sit still. When we speak, she’s preparing for multiple shows, among them a solo outing opening 2 November at Timothy Taylor gallery in New York, another at Fosun Museum in Shanghai next spring, and a Khan-Morris two-person exhibition that travelled from Newlands House in Petworth to Pitzhanger Manor & Gallery in London, where it would be on view through 7 January. Meanwhile, the couple are in the final stages of renovating a new home for themselves and their two young children—the former residence of Oscar Wilde’s lover Lord Alfred Douglas as well as of the artist William Rothenstein.
هذه القصة من طبعة March 2024 من Robb Report Singapore.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من Robb Report Singapore

Robb Report Singapore
BEST OF THE BEST - Design
A guaranteed conversation starter, Signature Kitchen Suite’s Mantle components are unlike anything that have come out in recent years.
3 mins
September 2025

Robb Report Singapore
BEST OF THE BEST - Wings
In January, Boom’s XB-1 became the first civil supersonic jet to break the sound barrier since the Concorde.
4 mins
September 2025

Robb Report Singapore
REALTY CHECK CREME DE LA CREME
Presenting this month's hottest properties for another place to call home.
2 mins
September 2025

Robb Report Singapore
BEST OF THE BEST - Water
The largest yacht by volume that has been built in the Netherlands, the 390ft Breakthrough justifies its name.
4 mins
September 2025

Robb Report Singapore
Raw Potential
Hundreds of objects from more than a century of jewellery and watch design are now on view at the Victoria & Albert Museum in London till November 2025. These are the few you can’t miss.
3 mins
September 2025

Robb Report Singapore
A Bubble Of Serenity
Regent Phu Quoc invites guests into a cocoon of calm, culture, and creativity.
3 mins
September 2025

Robb Report Singapore
The Next Generation Don't Just Want Wealth.They Want A Say
A quiet shift is taking place across Asia’s ultra-wealthy families. As succession plans begin to take shape and decades of capital moves from one generation to the next, many heirs are pushing for something different. More than just access to wealth, they expect bigger a role in deciding how it is used.
3 mins
September 2025

Robb Report Singapore
BEST OF THE BEST - Wheels
In a category defined by superlatives, the Battista (from US$2.5 million) still defies apt descriptors when it comes to acceleration, agility, and design.
4 mins
September 2025

Robb Report Singapore
Sweet Spot
London's most innovative chefs are reinventing the classic baba au rhum by replacing the titular tipple with unexpected drams.
3 mins
September 2025

Robb Report Singapore
Designing in the Age of No Easy Answers
At Design Futures Forum, visionary creatives, scientists, and strategists explore how design can lead us through uncertainty—by embracing complexity, not avoiding it.
2 mins
September 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size