In many ways Julian Freeman’s British Art: a walk round the rusty pier (2006) was a summation of two long spells of work at Brighton. As the Polytechnic’s Exhibition Officer from October 1978 until December 1989, Julian introduced into the gallery’s annual programmes sporadic exhibitions that offered new perspectives to key themes in British art from the 1880s to the (then) present
Julian Freeman has been a personal tutor at Sussex Downs College, Eastbourne, since August 2006, following a decade as that college’s Course Co-ordinator for Historical and Contextual Studies in Art and Design. He has written about art for many years, as a critic and reviewer, most recently in his book British art: a walk round the rusty pier (Southbank 2006), which was commissioned to be divisive and which did the job handsomely. In 1998 Julian began a (now) long-standing association with The Art Book, a Blackwells’ quarterly review, and, in the same year, Simon & Schuster published Art: a crash course, a provocative ‘how-to-do-it’, which proved a worldwide success. In 2000, with his Brighton colleague Paul Clark, he co-wrote Design, the critically acclaimed, tenth and last in the Crash Course series. Julian is presently completing a PhD in Art History, through prior publication, at Brighton.
From 1992 until 2000 Julian returned to the university as a visiting lecturer and tutor for the School of Historical and Critical Studies, and contributed to successive seasonal optional courses. Many of these examined important dormant but unfashionable themes in British art and culture, marked during earlier exhibition research, and ripe for review. It was the best kind of enjoyment.