ARTFEED — Contemporary Art Intelligence

Bonnie Camplin's 25-Year Quest to Redefine Art Through Esoteric Research and Pedagogy

artist · 2026-04-20

Bonnie Camplin, a British artist in her early fifties, has dedicated 25 years to formulating a theory on perception and time through her unique research, which combines elements of Celtic ritual and quantum physics. Initially concentrating on painting and drawing, she transitioned to conducting workshops and lectures, particularly highlighted during her 2015 Turner Prize exhibition, The Military Industrial Complex. Since 2018, she has ceased physical art creation, focusing instead on teaching at Goldsmiths, University of London, and engaging with the 'beyond-human world.' Living off-grid in a yurt in Cumbria, a near-death experience at age twenty-five reshaped her worldview. Her last exhibition took place in Berlin in 2018, where she voiced her critiques of the gallery system and imagined a future where creativity is universally acknowledged. Currently, she investigates psionic connections with nature.

Key facts

  • Bonnie Camplin is a British-born artist in her early fifties.
  • She has spent 25 years researching perception, ontology, and time through esoteric subjects.
  • Her last exhibition was in 2018 at Ebensperger in Berlin titled Free-will Preserves Full Disclosure.
  • Camplin had a near-death experience at age twenty-five, shifting her from atheism to animism.
  • She teaches at Goldsmiths, University of London, and previously taught at Städelschule in Frankfurt.
  • Camplin lives off-grid in a yurt in Cumbria and has a flat in London Bridge.
  • She critiques the gallery system and has not produced physical art since 2018.
  • Camplin collaborates with artists like Paulina Olowska and Mark Leckey.

Entities

Artists

  • Bonnie Camplin
  • Paulina Olowska
  • Mark Leckey
  • Matt Mullican
  • Werner Heisenberg
  • Viktor Schauberger
  • Walter Russell
  • Rupert Sheldrake
  • Jerzy Grotowski
  • Sarah Churchill
  • Andrew Aveling
  • The Beat Messenger

Institutions

  • Goldsmiths, University of London
  • Städelschule
  • Ebensperger
  • Turner Prize

Locations

  • London
  • United Kingdom
  • Cumbria
  • Berlin
  • Germany
  • Frankfurt
  • Krakow
  • Poland
  • Soho
  • London Bridge

Sources