
Interdisciplinary artist Annie Frost Nicholson’s work seeks to smash taboos around the nuanced complexities of the human condition. Through a curious, colourful and considered lens, Frost Nicholson’s practice looks at what it means to be alive.
In this talk, the artist talks about the journey her public realm projects take from conception to installation, creating spaces for people to share their collective and individual stories of mental health, loss, political frustration and climate anxiety in an ever more complex world.
Image: Jo Clark
Speakers

Annie Frost Nicholson
Multidisciplinary Artist
Annie Frost Nicholson (formerly The Fandangoe Kid) is a London-based multidisciplinary artist whose work seeks to smash taboos around the nuanced complexities of the human condition. Through a curious, colourful and considered lens, Frost Nicholson’s practice looks at what it means to be alive, and her preoccupation with life, death, grief and all their permeations follows her own devastating loss of family members twelve years ago, at the age of twenty-seven.


