


Isaac Lythgoe, 'You Will Be Required to Do Wrong No Matter Where You Go'
Isaac Lythgoe
You Will Be Required to Do Wrong No Matter Where You Go
37.5 x 36.5 inches
$1,000 USD
Isaac Lythgoe (b. 1989, Guernsey) is a Paris-based artist whose multidisciplinary work spans sculpture, writing, and conceptual painting. A graduate of the Royal College of Art, Lythgoe’s practice interrogates ethics, myth, and material through layered visual storytelling.
Your purchase supports Dallas Contemporary’s mission to present the leading edge of contemporary art through exhibitions, performances, and public programs. To inquire about this work, please contact shop@dallascontemporary.org.
Isaac Lythgoe
You Will Be Required to Do Wrong No Matter Where You Go
37.5 x 36.5 inches
$1,000 USD
Isaac Lythgoe (b. 1989, Guernsey) is a Paris-based artist whose multidisciplinary work spans sculpture, writing, and conceptual painting. A graduate of the Royal College of Art, Lythgoe’s practice interrogates ethics, myth, and material through layered visual storytelling.
Your purchase supports Dallas Contemporary’s mission to present the leading edge of contemporary art through exhibitions, performances, and public programs. To inquire about this work, please contact shop@dallascontemporary.org.
Isaac Lythgoe
You Will Be Required to Do Wrong No Matter Where You Go
37.5 x 36.5 inches
$1,000 USD
Isaac Lythgoe (b. 1989, Guernsey) is a Paris-based artist whose multidisciplinary work spans sculpture, writing, and conceptual painting. A graduate of the Royal College of Art, Lythgoe’s practice interrogates ethics, myth, and material through layered visual storytelling.
Your purchase supports Dallas Contemporary’s mission to present the leading edge of contemporary art through exhibitions, performances, and public programs. To inquire about this work, please contact shop@dallascontemporary.org.
Isaac Lythgoe creates layered, narrative-driven installations that blur reality and fiction through sculpture, text, and found materials. Drawing from film, folklore, and personal mythologies, his work stages fragmented scenes that suggest both ruin and renewal. Lythgoe constructs environments that feel both cinematic and intimate, inviting viewers into worlds that are familiar yet uncanny, where meaning is constantly shifting.
