Helen Chadwick: Life Pleasures
17 May - 27 October 2025
Exhibition entry is £13 / £11 / FREE for Members, Wakefield District residents and under 18s. Ticket includes entry to all our gallery spaces on the day of visit.
Tickets available soonBritish artist Helen Chadwick (1953 – 1996) embraced the sensuous aspects of the natural world, breaking taboos of the ‘traditional’ or ‘beautiful’ in art history.
This major retrospective will be the first in over 25 years, and will chart the development of Chadwick’s art from her renowned degree show piece In the Kitchen (1977) through to her Piss Flowers (1991–2).
Chadwick’s experiments across mediums were innovative and unconventional; typically combining aesthetic beauty with an alliance of unusual, often grotesque materials. She consistently expressed a feminist perspective steeped in humour, and employed a vast range of materials in unexpected ways, incorporating bodily fluids, meat, flowers, chocolate and compost into her works. Through her skilled use of traditional fabrication methods and sophisticated technologies, she quickly established herself as a leading figure amongst Britain’s post-war avant-garde, becoming one of the first women artists to be nominated for the Turner Prize in 1987.
The exhibition will highlight Chadwick’s significant impact and contributions to British and international art history by demonstrating her relevance to contemporary feminist concerns, her evolution of material culture and her consistently playful approach.
One of ‘the exhibitions you must see in 2025’ Art Fund
‘Helen Chadwick was a force of nature – outspoken, inventive and full of ideas. Her death in 1996 at 42 curtailed a career marked by its adventurousness and use of a startling range of materials.’ Adrian Searle, The best art and architecture shows to visit in 2025, The Guardian
‘The influential British artist Helen Chadwick (1953-1996) wasn’t just innovative and unconventional, she was also funny. Her feminist explorations and subversions of what is beautiful or natural used unexpected materials (bodily fluids, meat, flowers, chocolate, compost) alongside both traditional and emerging technologies.’ Nancy Durrant, The 10 best exhibitions to see in 2025, The Times
Press highlights
Forthcoming exhibitions
Exhibition supported by
The Helen Chadwick Exhibition Circle:
Marguerite Steed Hoffman & those who wish to remain anonymous
Publication Supporter:
Paul Mellon Centre