All Kinds of Hands imagined sculpture as something formed by different people. Offering new models for collective making which venture beyond individual vision, works by five artists - Ellie Barrett, Nisha Duggal, Beata Podstawa, Assunta Ruocco and Sarah Ryder - from across the UK presented sculpture as a means of engaging communities, welcoming alternative perspectives, and positioning art practice as a collaborative field. Pieces on display included object-based artworks, sculptural environments and site specific projects exhibited via documentation. All of these approaches are concerned with increasing public access to art making and considering shared experiences - playing, drawing, walking and talking - as existing ways of making.