It comes as the Artistic Museum of Contemporary Art will host its second pop-up exhibition in Wales.
The not-for-profit Artistic Museum of Contemporary Art (AMOCA) will stage its second pop-up exhibition in Cardiff next week as it continues to search for a permanent home to showcase Welsh contemporary artists to the world.
Following the success of its inaugural exhibition in the Marble Hall at the Temple of Peace last summer, which exhibited work from 38 African and African diaspora artists, it is returning to the same venue for its second event. The exhibition, following a private viewing event, will run from April 15 to 18.
AMOCA Dialogues Wales: New Voices from the Museum Collection, will feature more than 40 female and non-binary international artists across painting, sculpture, and material experimentation. Artists featured will include Lynda Benglis, Ewa Juszkiewicz, Elizabeth Peyton, Issy Wood, and Wales-based artist of more than four decades, Shani Rhys James.
Rhys James was born in Melbourne in 1953 to an Australian mother and a Welsh father, moved to the UK as a child, studied at Loughborough and Saint Martin’s in London, and later settled in rural Powys with her husband and young family.
Over the decades, she has become widely regarded as one of Wales’s foremost painters, with major awards including the Gold Medal for Fine Art at the National Eisteddfod, the Jerwood Painting Prize, and an MBE in 2006. Her work is held in leading collections, including National Museum Cardiff.
She said: “I’m who I am, and I’m half Welsh… I chose my Welsh identity, really, by staying in Wales. I paint about mostly quite personal things… It’s a lot to do with feeling… the force of life.”
She is generous about Wales, but unsentimental. Asked about the Welsh art scene, she describes it as lively, exploratory, and often more interesting than outsiders realise. But she is equally clear about the structural problem: visibility. She added: “We don’t have enough press. We don’t have enough critical debate.” Or, more bluntly: We are a bit of a secret, quite frankly.”
AMOCA co-founder is Swedish-born philanthropist and entrepreneur Anders Hedlund. He said: “Shani Rhys James represents an essential part of that story – an artist whose work carries both local depth and universal resonance.”
.Alongside Mr Hedlund, its founding team is a collective of art lovers, curators, and professionals passionate about broadening access to contemporary art. Its privately funded collection includes over 1,000 museum-grade works by world-class contemporary artists.
It is still evaluating a number of property locations in Cardiff for a permanent home to showcase the work of contemporary Welsh artists, with discussions ongoing with Cardiff Council, the Welsh Government, Cardiff University, and private property landlords.
Mr Hedlund said: “Having worked on and built up a collection of art over the past 30 years, it is clear that Wales has some amazing contemporary artists, but sadly many don’t have the exposure that artists in the other home nations have. Auction houses in London often feature Scottish or Irish collections, but I have never seen a Welsh collection.
“That is why we are desperate to find a permanent home to create the first dedicated museum of contemporary art in Wales, and one that would attract visitors from around the world. The museum would promote the work of Welsh painters and artists, while also providing a platform to support young and up-and-coming artists.
“It would also include works from international artists. It is about securing the right building, but we remain confident that a suitable location, whether in the city centre or elsewhere in Cardiff, will be secured shortly. We are open to acquiring a building or renting one to serve our goal of putting Welsh contemporary art on the world stage.”
Mr Hedlund is best known for establishing the global stationery-to-Christmas-cracker venture IG Design Group, which has its UK manufacturing base in Ystrad Mynach.
He also established the Cardiff-based charitable-status school Tomorrow’s Generation, which provides intensive literacy support for children with dyslexia, a condition he himself has been diagnosed with.










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