painting
Maggi Hambling, National GalleryFriday, 05 December 2014![]() I must admit to feeling, briefly, just a little disappointed on first sight of Maggi Hambling’s Walls of Water, nine new paintings on show at the National Gallery. Perhaps it was the evocative title, which promises high drama and instant... Read more... |
HockneyFriday, 28 November 2014![]() David Hockney was continually rejuvenated by his transatlantic commuting. The painter, printmaker, draughtsman, photographer, and stage designer, was also a writer producing theories of seeing, and was fascinated by digital... Read more... |
Imagine... Anselm Kiefer, BBC OneTuesday, 18 November 2014![]() Anselm Kiefer reminds me a bit of someone I once worked for. Totally unpredictable, and possessed of a formidable intelligence and creativity, his mental leaps can be bewilderingly hard to follow, leading occasionally to truly breathtaking results,... Read more... |
Mr TurnerFriday, 31 October 2014![]() There's been much talk about Late Turner, to co-opt the name of the exhibition now on view at Tate Britain covering the last 16 years in the English artist JMW Turner's singular career. And as if perfectly timed to chime with those canvases in... Read more... |
Giovanni Battista Moroni, Royal AcademyWednesday, 29 October 2014![]() Written in the 16th century, Giorgio Vasari’s Lives of the Artists continues to underpin our understanding of the Renaissance, and its author is blamed, often with some justification, for a multitude of art historical anomalies. But there can be... Read more... |
Late Turner: Painting Set Free, Tate BritainFriday, 12 September 2014![]() There is early Turner; there is late Turner. Early Turner is very much of his time: a history and landscape painter in the first half of the 19th century, looking back to the classicism of Claude and the Dutch Golden Age tradition of sombre marine... Read more... |
What Lies Beneath: The Secret Life of PaintingsWednesday, 30 July 2014![]() The doctoring of political images became something of a tradition in the last century, with Stalin, Hitler and Mao all airbrushing their enemies from photographs. The latest infrared technology has revealed that something similar may have happened... Read more... |
Goltzius and the Pelican CompanyTuesday, 08 July 2014![]() Perhaps the most surprising - and certainly the most moving moment - of the 2014 British Academy Film Awards was the awarding of Outstanding British Contribution to Cinema to Peter Greenaway. Surprising, not because this wasn't colossally deserved (... Read more... |
Making Colour, National GalleryMonday, 30 June 2014![]() The National Gallery has a range of personas it adopts for its exhibitions, and for this one, about colour, it has deployed the po-faced, teachy one. The pompous tone is because it’s not just about art this time, there’s science in it, which makes... Read more... |
Hernan Bas: Memphis Living, Victoria MiroMonday, 12 May 2014![]() At the core of Memphis Living by Hernan Bas are five large paintings of equal size that could be blown-up spreads from a fashion magazine. Each features a modellish young man surrounded by statement architecture, iconic design and lush vegetation.... Read more... |
I Cheer a Dead Man's Sweetheart, De La Warr PavilionFriday, 04 April 2014![]() Given the kooky title of a new painting show at De La Warr Pavilion, it seems necessary to point out, yet again, that painting isn’t dead. The line is from poet A.E Housman, who wrote a versified dialogue between a dead man and his living friend. So... Read more... |
Painting Now: Five Contemporary Artists, Tate BritainWednesday, 13 November 2013![]() A chronological hang of its permanent collection instead of the once so modish thematic one, a show devoted entirely to contemporary painting, which was not at all modish until quite recently – things are definitely astir at Tate Britain. Next week... Read more... |
