North Korea is one of the most isolated countries in the world and the acronym, DPRK seems a fitting title for this austere and melancholic portrait of Korea.

Born in 1916, Maurice Broomfield left school at the age of 15 to work in a factory while spending his evenings studying at Derby College of Art.

The starting point for Roland Hicks' work is always the photograph, and while his images are rendered in paint, the photographic aesthetic and the 'decisive moment'

This exhibition combines two major projects by the Vietnamese born artist An-my Lę. Both are concerned with the representation of conflict that explores personal memory and ‘the theatre of war’.

The photographic representation of Africa in a Western context – characterised by largely pejorative imagery – has always held an intense fascination for the artist Paul Seawright.

This exhibition presents new work from Jerwood photography prize winner Richard Page. His large luminous lightboxes entitled What we already know depict a landscape devoid of people.

In 1968 Paul Fusco accompanied the body of Robert Kennedy from New York City to its final resting place in Arlington Cemetery, Washington.

This exhibition by Orkney artist Colin Kirkpatrick incorporates a range of media - photography, sculpture and prints - which revolve around the central feature, a short, poetic and evocative film, ‘The Cowboy and the Spaceman’.

This exhibition brings together a new film, The Forest and series of photographs by the Israeli-born, British-based artist Ori Gersht.

John Wood and Paul Harrison have been making video works together since 1993 combining elements of sculpture and performance.

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