fri 25/10/2024

Visual Arts Reviews

theartsdesk in Florence: Pontormo and Rosso Fiorentino

Jasper Rees

Sadly, the name may not mean much. Jacopo Pontormo is a Florentine painter whose fate it was to come of age in the years after the high tide of the High Renaissance. Its vast shadow has left him languishing in second-division obscurity. Every day in Paris thousands of tourists turn their backs on his Madonna and Child with Saints to gawp at the Mona Lisa. No one visiting Florence lingers in front of his Venus and Cupid, c. 1533 (pictured below) in...

Read more...

Ruin Lust, Tate Britain

Sarah Kent

The first room of Ruin Lust is a knockout. Three large-scale pictures indicate the enduring fascination that ruins have held for artists over the centuries. John Martin’s apocalyptic view of Vesuvius smothering Pompeii in a vast cloud of volcanic ash (main picture) is like a vision of Hell. The engulfing dust storm is shaped like a fiery grotto seductive yet repellent.

Read more...

theartsdesk at the Marrakech Biennale: "Where Are We Now?"

Mark Sheerin

Whether fingerprint or labyrinth, the swirly logo for Marrakech Biennale 5 feels apt. The festival has left its mark upon the city. It questions Moroccan notions of identity. And, going by the tagline, “Where are we now?” it reflects the ease with which you can get lost in this rich and bewildering land.

Read more...

The Great War in Portraits, National Portrait Gallery

Florence Hallett

Telling a story through an exhibition can be a bad idea, partly because it seems a little pedestrian but mainly because it runs the risk of using art as illustration, glibly treating paintings as if they were objective visual records. In its title, The Great War in Portraits makes very plain its use of portraiture as a lens through which to view this earth-shattering conflict, but any anxieties about its handling of such a tricky approach are quickly assuaged.

Read more...

Strange Beauty: Masters of the German Renaissance, National Gallery

Florence Hallett

Strange Beauty: Masters of the German Renaissance finds the National Gallery in curiously reflective mood. Taking as its subject the gallery’s own mixed bag of German Renaissance paintings, the exhibition sets about explaining – and excusing – the inadequacies of its collection, suggesting that it simply reflects the disdain with which German painting was once regarded.

Read more...

Bunkers, Brutalism and Bloody­mindedness: Concrete Poetry, BBC Four

Fisun Güner

Is Brutalism brutal? Pugnacious? Uncouth? The name was coined by English academic and architecture writer Reynor Banham – more on him in a moment – as a play on the French béton brut (literally raw concrete) and the English “brute”, and hence was probably doomed from the start. Who, after all, can love an architectural style that sounds like it’s got all the grace of a troglodyte doing a plié before punching you in the face?  

Read more...

The Edwardian Grand Designer, Channel 4

Tom Birchenough

Britain’s last castle, Drogo, may be only just over a century old, but repair work is going on in a big way – it’s currently the National Trust’s largest-scale restoration project.

Read more...

The Brits Who Built the Modern World, BBC Four / The Man Who Fought the Planners, BBC Four

Tom Birchenough

There really was astonishing talent on display in The Brits Who Built the Modern World (*****), as full a television panorama of the work of the five architects whose careers were under examination – Richard Rogers, Norman Foster, Nicholas Grimshaw, Michael Hopkins and Terry Farrell – as we’re ever likely to get.

Read more...

Berlinale 2014: Cathedrals of Culture

Tom Birchenough

Back at the Venice Biennale in 2010, the German film director Wim Wenders showed a 3D video installation titled “If Buildings Could Talk”.

Read more...

Richard Hamilton, Tate Modern /ICA

Fisun Güner

Some artists are diminished by major retrospectives, including those artists we consider great. A gap opens up between what you see and what you hear, which is why you can never judge work with your ears, or at least your ears and nothing else.

Read more...

Pages

latest in today

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...

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

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

Album: Underworld - Strawberry Hotel

Purveyors of extraordinary energy and euphoria, Underworld never miss a beat. The new album – 30 years on from their debut, and their...

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...