Harold Gosney – York Art Gallery

On Wednesday 4th January, I visited York Art Gallery.

I took a look at the pots and the paintings, ending with a stroll around the sculptures of Howard Gosney.

Having previously encountered his work at the Abbey Walk car park Grimsby in 2019.

Visiting again in 2025 prior to demolition.

Photo BBC

The Grimsby, Cleethorpes and District Civic Society has been campaigning to save the Harold Gosney reliefs on the 1960s Abbey Walk car park, which closed in May 2024 after North East Lincolnshire Council said it discovered structural defects. 

The authority has already taken 3D scans of the art and in an update said plans were in place to try and save one of each of the four designs, which are repeated on the building’s columns.

If they can be saved, the artwork would be put into storage until a new home is found, the council added.

January 2026

There are also works by Harold by the entrance to the Grimsby Central Library

And the Grim and Havelok themed copper relief on the side of Wilko store in Old Market Place.

All these works were first encountered on my Grimsby Walk for the modernist.

I was delighted to find that Harold himself was visiting the gallery with friends.

I stopped to chat and take a snap – thanking him for all his wonderful work and congratulating him on his excellent show.

Here is what I done seen.

Harold Gosney: Materials and Making
15 November 2025 – 28 June 2026
Included in general admission | Book now

Titled ‘Materials and Making’, this exhibition is a celebration of the work of renowned Yorkshire sculptor and artist, Harold Gosney – born 1937, who has spent over 65 years creating mixed media art pieces. 

The exhibition explores Gosney’s expert experimentation with various types of wood and metal throughout his career andconsiders the importance of drawing to his artistic practice. Materials and Making looks at how Gosney draws inspiration from his immediate environment and lived experiences, with horses, the human figure and music emerging as particularly influential subjects.

Featuring over 45 works, highlights include his striking ‘Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse’, crafted from copper and Perspex, the emotive ‘Father and Son, Bam’, his ‘Jazzman’, expertly carved from a single block of sycamore wood, and a trio of drawings depicting views of the nearby York Museum Gardens.

Leave a comment