Showing posts with label Modern Art Oxford. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Modern Art Oxford. Show all posts

Sunday, 25 January 2015

Morris & Warhol - Modern Art Oxford

Andy Warhol and William Morris
Love Is Enough: William Morris & Andy Warhol, curated by Jeremy Deller is at Modern Art Oxford until 8 March 2015.
I love Andy Warhol (see below); I love William Morris; I am also a bit of a fan of Jeremy Deller (see below). So I was pretty excited by the prospect of this exhibition. (With another of my heroes, William Blake, the subject of an exhibition at the Ashmolean (see below) a visit to Oxford was irresistable.)
Broadly, the premise for this suprising pairing of artists is that they both employed printmaking processes in collaborative factory production systems as a means to extend and  distribute their art; they both employed repetition as a design principle; they both used flower imagery and made pictures of cultural heroes and myths; the show even tries to argue that Warhol's politics had some affinity with Morris' socialism.
However, I don't think it works: there are a few terrific pieces in the exhibition, but the juxtapositions are, too often, painful clashes rather than complementary contrasts. Two of Warhol's Electric Chair screenprints on a background of Morris' densely patterned wall paper does neither artist a favour. Generally, I think that Warhol is the loser in this contest: Morris' dense, highly crafted designs make Warhol's casual elegance look lightweight and thin. But it's an unfair contest - the earnest sincerity and idealism of Morris' nostalgic vision sits awkwardly with Warhol's ironic detachment. The fact that they both made wallpaper isn't enought to make them brothers in art. (In fact Morris and William Blake would make a much more sympathetic pairing;  the Blake show, incidentally, is excellent.)

Read reviews by Waldemar Januszczak, Richard Dorment (he hated it!) and Farah Nayeri. Click on images to enlarge.
William Morris, printed fabric design: Kennet, 1883
William Morris, wall paper design: Acanthus, 1879
William Morris, wall paper: Acanthus, 1879
William Morris, 'Kelmscott Chaucer', 1896
William Morris, bound pamphlet: How I Became a Socialist, 1896
Andy Warhol, Elizabeth Taylor, 1967
Andy Warhol, Electric Chair, 1971
Andy Warhol, Flowers, 1970
Andy Warhol, Cow wallpaper, 1971
Love is Enough... installation featuring Andy Warhol, Marilyn Tapestry, 1968 and photograph of Shirley Temple (1941) from Warhol's collection, on wallpaper by William Morris
Love is Enough... installation

Saturday, 23 June 2012

Jenny Saville - Modern Art Oxford

Jenny Saville, Atonement Studies: Central Panel (Rosetta), 2005-06
Jenny Saville is at Modern Art Oxford and the Ashmolean (23 June - 16 September 2012) and is the artist's first major, solo exhibition in a public gallery. Saville came to attention in the 1990s with her large  paintings of large bodies mapped out with contour lines indicative of planned surgical modification: women's engorged bellies, swollen breasts and thighs, shouting of anguished self-image in bloody gobs of pigment (Skye Sherwin in The Guardian). Her work has continued to focus on the female (and transgender) body and face; recent work includes drawings and paintings inspired by Renaissance Virgin and Child paintings.
Read an interview with Rachel Cooke: I want to be a painter of modern life, and modern bodies.
Jenny Saville, Fulcrum, 1997-99
Jenny Saville, Bleach, 2008
Jenny Saville, Entry, 2004-2005
Jenny Saville, Passage, 2004-2005
Jenny Saville, Reverse, 2003
Jenny Saville, Torso II, 2005