thu 24/10/2024

Visual Arts Reviews

Sotto Voce, Dominique Lévy

Sarah Kent

Sotto Voce is a collection of white paintings, sculptures and reliefs made by European, British and North and South American artists from the 1930s to 1970s. An accompanying book explains why this non-colour has appealed to so many artists in so many countries over such a long period of time.

Read more...

Magnificent Obsessions, Barbican Art Gallery

Florence Hallett

The title has it about right: no matter what it is they are busily acquiring, collectors seem to be an obsessive bunch, and their obsessions can achieve quite magnificent proportions. The stereotyped image of the collector as a socially challenged monomaniac doesn’t really fit with the popular understanding of the artistic temperament, though.

Read more...

History is Now: 7 Artists Take On Britain, Hayward Gallery

Sarah Kent

A Bloodhound Mark 2 surface-to-air missile points to the sky from the terrace outside the Hayward Gallery. From 1963–1990, the missiles were stationed along the east coast, from Humberside to the Thames, to intercept Soviet planes coming to drop atom bombs on Britain.

Read more...

Sargent: Portraits of Artists and Friends, National Portrait Gallery

Marina Vaizey

Oh, Dr Pozzi! This gorgeous man is garbed in a red wool, full-length robe, almost completely obscuring his elegantly gleaming white shirt. The shirt collar frames his face, casting light, and its frilled cuffs emphasise his improbably long-fingered hands in a lively gesture.

Read more...

First Happenings: Adrian Henri in the ’60s and ’70s, ICA

Markie Robson-Scott

If you bought a Beatles album in the Sixties, chances are you also bought The Mersey Sound, that best-selling collection of poems by the Liverpool poets Brian Patten, Roger McGough and Adrian Henri. It was launched at the Cavern Club in 1967 to musical accompaniment. Their poems felt new, accessible and exciting. "Love is feeling cold in the back of vans," wrote Henri, "Love is a fanclub with only two fans / Love is walking holding paintstained hands / Love is /."

Read more...

Christian Marclay, White Cube

Sarah Kent

Christian Marclay is best known as the author of Video Quartet, 2002 the most exciting artist’s video ever made. The four-screen extravaganza juxtaposes more than 700 clips from Hollywood movies of people singing, dancing and playing instruments not to mention screaming, whistling or smashing crockery.

Read more...

Marlene Dumas: The Image as Burden, Tate Modern

Sarah Kent

"My fatherland is South Africa, my mother tongue is Afrikaans, my surname is French, I don’t speak French. My mother always wanted me to go to Paris. She thought art was French because of Picasso. I thought art was American because of Artforum... I live in Amsterdam and have a Dutch passport. Sometimes I think I’m not a real artist because I’m too half-hearted and I never quite know where I am." (Marlene Dumas)

Read more...

Rubens and His Legacy, Royal Academy

Florence Hallett

What does it mean to be a great artist? Is it enough for your work to be admired, studied, emulated and quoted by contemporaries and subsequent generations, or is the value of art judged by a more complex set of criteria? By considering the extent of Rubens’ influence on artists from Rembrandt to Klimt, the Royal Academy is having a go at skinning a very old and troublesome cat: the elevation of Rubens from gifted confectioner to worthy Old Master.

Read more...

PJ Harvey: Recording in Progress, Artangel at Somerset House

mark Kidel

Artangel continues to instigate extraordinary events in extraordinary places. Over the past two decades and more, directors Michael Morris and James Lingwood have helped generate major and ground-breaking work by Rachel Whiteread, Brian Eno, Laurie Anderson, Roni Horn, Jeremy Deller, Steve McQueen, Matthew Barney, Gregor Schneider, Francis Alÿs and many others. It's a long list.

Read more...

Adventures of the Black Square: Abstract Art and Society 1915-2015, Whitechapel Gallery

Fisun Güner

From an apparently simple idea stems a very confusing exhibition. Here’s the idea: taking the seminal black square painted by Russian artist Kazimir Malevich as its starting point – in fact, a rectangle, with the small and undated Black Quadrilateral the first of three Malevich paintings – we are invited, over the span of a century and across a number of continents, to explore the evolution of geometric abstraction and its relation to “ideas of utopia”.  

Read more...

Pages

latest in today

Albert Herring, Scottish Opera review - fun, frivolity, and...

Having premiered at the Lammermuir Festival earlier this year, Daisy Evans’s new production of...

theartsdesk Q&A: director Jacques Audiard on his Mexican...

Jacques Audiard – creator of such subversive crime dramas and alternative romances as Read My Lips (2001), The Beat That My Heart...

The Wild Duck, The Norwegian Ibsen Company, Coronet Theatre...

“I think this is all very strange,” declares 14-year-old Hedvig Ekdal at the end of The Wild Duck’s third act, just as everything is...

London Film Festival 2024 - Angelina Jolie does Maria Callas

Maria

How do you solve a problem like Maria?...

Encounters, Royal Ballet review - exciting mixed bill with a...

In 2022, the American choreographer Pam Tanowitz made a duet on...

Emilia Perez review - Audiard's beguiling musical tribu...

A Mexican drugs cartel boss. A transitioning man. A strikingly beautiful woman lawyer risking all against corruption. Bittersweet songs...

First Person: Bob Riley on Manchester Camerata's champi...

In May, it was announced that Greater Manchester was to...

Album: Bastille - &

Grandiloquent indie-synth-pop outfit Bastille have been...

Dahomey review - return of the king

Mati Diop’s “speculative documentary” reverses the transatlantic journey of her feature debut Atlantics’ ghost Senegalese migrants, as...

Le nozze di Figaro, The Mozartists, Page, Cadogan Hall revie...

Ten years ago, Ian Page launched his and the Mozartists’ (then Classical Opera’s) remarkable endeavour to play music by WA Mozart 250 years after...