Anne Ramsden

[1][2] Ramsden was a co-founder, along with Francine Perinet and Angela Grauerholz,[3] of the documentation centre and bookstore Artexte and served as co-director from 1980 to 1987.

Ramsden's work has investigated museology and museum display practices, mass media, and the social spaces and visual culture engendered by new technologies.

"[6] Reclaimed for Mercouri (1987), created for Parachute Magazine, consisted of two photographs of the Elgin Marbles in the British Museum printed on the recto and verso of the same page.

[6] The project considers, "the temporal/spatial shift required to see and present art from more than one point of view by drawing a parallel between the physical act of moving through the gallery and the turning of a page.

"[6] Robin Laurence describes Ramsden's seven-monitory video installation, Urban Geography, as using, "a strategy of fragmentation and failed communication" in order to convey, "a condition of alienation.

Anne Ramsden, "Museum of the Everyday, The Morning Walk Collection/Musée du quotidien, Collection promenade matinale," 2005-2014, inkjet print on polypropylene. Collection of the artist From the series of 65 photo-posters entitled Museum of the Everyday/Musée du quotidien, 2005-2014. To view the series go to https://www.flickr.com/photos/anneramsden