Past Exhibitions
Dying Matters
This exhibition coincides with Hospice UK Dying Matters Awareness Week, which focusses on the need for honest, transparent conversations about death and dying, to help people feel informed, supported, and empowered.
Schools: Where I Live
Cromer Junior School and Gresham Village have joined forces to create art to exhibit with Cromer ArtSpace in April.
Connect Keron Beattie
The works (artefacts) in this exhibition explore connection and disconnection and the potential of materials to transform, often in response to external forces such as heat or pressure.
Rule 4: Consider Everything an Experiment
artpocketThe Artpocket community has selected Rule 4 as appropriate to the ethos of their studios; a freedom to 'play', the joy of happy accidents and the value of the creative process.
Hanse Experiments (Part II)
Hanse Experiments (Part I) brought us into contact with a variety of local people who have influenced the way we think about the Norfolk coastline and the North Sea. In Part II, exactly 12 months on, we are not only returning to place, but bringing together some of different strands and people who have informed…
Material Process
Francesca Cant, Kaitlin Ferguson and Hannelore Smith are three artists exploring urban and coastal environments. Key crossovers in their practices include investigations into materials, locality, process and form.
Autumn Show
Artspace on the Prom will be filled with a variety of new and recent work, in a wide range of media by artists from East Anglia and beyond.
Black and White: From the Ethereal to the Concrete
Objects will hover above the ground allowing visitors to walk through and around the them. Sculptures made of black ‘Ciment Fondu’ will emerge from the ground to form a dialogue with both Ether and the visitors.
Vanity Monsters Craig Visser
Landscape and still life have been common tropes for artists for centuries, and are still being exploited through social media, the food images and selfies against exotic backdrops that flood our feeds.
Look Out Ruth Butler

Ruth Butler uses shapes and patterns found in both natural and man made forms, interested in the interaction between chance and control and our emotive response to colour.
