Iain Andrews

Iain Andrews (born 1974) is a contemporary English painter.

[2][4] He is a member of Contemporary British Painting and has exhibited nationally and internationally.

[5] In 2009 Andrews was one of twelve artists chosen to appear in the BBC Television series "School of Saatchi",[6][7] he won the Marmite Prize for Painting III (2010-2011) with his work "The East Me" (500mm x 600mm acrylic on canvas).

[8] He was a judge for the Marmite Prize for Painting IV (2012–13)[9] and was runner-up in the Greater Manchester Chamber of Commerce GM Art Prize 2016.

[10] 2015 - Changeling, York College Gallery, York, England[12] 2014 - Re:view, solo exhibition, Castlefield Gallery, Manchester, England[2] 2013 - Il teatro dei leviatano, Man and Eve, London[13] 2013 - The Language of Paint (with Richard Kenton Webb), Atkinson Gallery, Somerset, England[14] 2012 - Mythopoeia, Warrington Museum and Art Gallery, Warrington, England[15] 2011 - Man & Eve at the Manchester Contemporary Art Fair, England[16] 2009 - The Pilgrimage of Lost Children and Other Stories, Bankley Mill, Manchester, England[17] 2016 - Correspond, Artworks, Halifax and touring London, Liverpool and Rye, England[18] 2016 - Sixty, Lubomirov / Angus- Hughes, London[19] 2016 - Finalist in the judged exhibition Anthology, Van der Plas Gallery, New York[20] 2015 - Detail, The Usher Gallery, Lincoln, England[21] 2014 - Detail, H Project Space, Bangkok, Thailand & Transition Gallery London[21] 2013 - Beautiful Things, The Next Door Projects, Albert Dock, Liverpool, England[22] 2012 - The Creatures of Prometheus, International Beethoven Festival, Chicago, USA[1] 2011 - Polemically Small, Garboushian Gallery, Los Angeles, USA[1][23] 2011 - We Are All In This Together, Bureau Gallery, Manchester, UK[1][24] 2010/11 The Marmite Prize III, Tameside Gallery, London, UK[25] 2010 - The Borrowed Loop, Man & Eve, London, UK[26] 2010 - The Crash Salon, Charlie Dutton Gallery, London, UK[27] 2009 - Salon 09, Matt Roberts Arts, London, UK[28] 2009 - British Art in the Twenty First Century, Opera Gallery, Hungary[1]