Sunday, 4 March 2012

Alighiero Boetti: Game Plan - Tate Modern

Alighiero Boetti, Aerei, 1989
Alighiero Boetti: Game Plan at Tate Modern until 27 May is a rare opportunity to see the work of this intriguing artist. Boetti, who died in 1994, was included in Germano Celant's 1967 Arte Povera exhibition and subsequently developed a socially collaborative practice that anticipated relational aesthetics. Dividing his time between Italy and Afghanistan, but also working in Ethiopia, Japan, Pakistan and Guatemala,  his work includes world maps emroidered by Afghan craftspeople, collaboratively produced biro pen drawings, mail art and a box containing a light bulb (Lampada Annuale, 1966) which, teasingly, lights up for only 11 seconds per year - at a random moment.
Read reviews by Laura Cumming and Adrian Searle. See also articles in Parkett (1990) and Art in America (2001) - both  available on the Sperone Westwater website, and Frieze (2000).
Alighiero Boetti, Mappa del Mondo, 1994
Alighiero Boetti, Mappa del Mondo
Alighiero Boetti, Ping Pong, 1966
Alighiero Boetti, Immaginando Tutto, 1982
Alighiero Boetti, Lampada Annuale, 1966

Thursday, 1 March 2012

Ha Ha What Does This Represent? - Standpoint

Ad Reinhardt, How to Look at Modern Art in America (detail), 1946
A detail from Ad Reinhardt's 1946 drawing, How to Look at Modern Art in America, provides the title for an exhibition of contemporary abstract painting at the Standpoint Gallery until 31 March: Ha Ha What Does This Represent? 
Exhibiting artists are:
The exhibition is sponsored by abstract critical - see article by David Ryan.
NB Selected illustrations below are representative of the artists' work but are not necessarilly works included in the exhibition.
Andrew Bick, OGV [Double Spider] Dirty B, 2009
Emma Biggs & Matthew Collings, The Unseen, 2010
Katrina Blannin, Ultrapolation, 2009
Ben Cove, Crosses and Quadrangles, 2011
Alex Gene Morrison, Vanish, 2010
Carol Robertson, Starstream, 2011
Daniel Sturgis, Living Well, 2007
Trevor Sutton, Japanese Folk Song, 2011

Tuesday, 21 February 2012

Jeremy Deller: Joy in People - Hayward Gallery

Jeremy Deller, Art Exhibition
Jeremy Deller is, I think, one of the most interesting of contemporary British artists and I am looking forward to visiting Jeremy Deller: Joy in People at the Hayward Gallery. (This was not his choice of title, as he revealed in an interview on radio 4's Front Row (20 Feb), he proposed Animal, Vegetable, Pop Music.)
Treats in store include a 3D film of bats, a re-creation of Deller's teenage (and later) bedroom, a film of his restaging of the 1984 Battle of Orgreave between striking miners and the police, the remains of a bomb blasted car from Baghdad, a film about 1970s wrestling star Adrian Street, and free tea from a reconstructed Lancashire café! A Middle Class Hero is something to be!
Read a reviews by Adrian Searle and Laura Cumming.
Jeremy Deller, Open Bedroom, 1988-1994
Jeremy Deller, Exodus, 2012
Jeremy Deller, The Battle of Orgreave, 2001
Jeremy Deller, Valerie's Snack Bar, 2009
Jeremy Deller, Life is to Blame for Everything

Monday, 20 February 2012

David LaChapelle: Earth Laughs in Flowers - Robilant + Voena

David LaChapelle, The Lovers
I am not a fan of David LaChapelle's work, though I know many are: I find his mannered, baroque excess repellent. According to an article by Elizabeth Day LaChapelle 'retired' from the fashion world, six years ago, to concentrate on art photography. This exhibition at Robilant + Voena, Earth Laughs in Flowers is his take on the vanitas theme in which the traditional motifs are supplemented by contemporary objects. There is certainly something compelling about these lush, suffocating images and I think they very effectively represent the idea that all is vanity. But I don't like them!
Watch a video of LaChapelle talking about his work. 
David LaChapelle, America
David LaChapelle, Early Fall
David LaChapelle, Springtime

Wednesday, 15 February 2012

Picasso and Modern British Art - Tate Britain

Pablo Picasso, Compote Dish and Grapes, 1924
Picasso and Modern British Art at Tate Britain until 15 July should be a really interesting exhibition. Britain's relationship to Picasso and Modernism was somewhat equivocal: Andrew Graham-Dixon in his television series A History of British Art unearthed a tape recording of a 1949 speech by Alfred Munnings, retiring president of the Royal Academy, in which he recounted a conversation with Winston Churchill: he [Churchill] said to me: "Alfred, if you met that Picasso coming down the street would you join with me  in kicking his something something?" I said, "Yes, sir! I would!" (Graham-Dixon, A. (1996) A History of British Art, London: BBC, p82)
On the other hand, Richard Shone, in Pablo Picasso and his influence on British Art, recounts how members of the Bloomsbury Group - Clive and Vanessa Bell, and Duncant Grant  - were early enthusiasts for, friends to, and collectors of, Picasso.
The exhibition includes work by British artists who were admirers of Picasso: Vanessa Bell, Duncan Grant, Wyndham Lewis, Ben Nicholson, Henry Moore, Graham Sutherland, Francis Bacon and David Hockney. It will be interesting to see whether these artists can stand comparison with Picasso - whether or or not, the exhibition will be a treat just for seeing the Picassos.
Read reviews by Laura Cumming, Jonathan Jones and Richard Dorment.
Pablo Picasso, Man with a Clarinet, 1911-12
Pablo Picasso, The Source, 1921
Pablo Picasso, The Three Dancers, 1925
Pablo Picasso, Weeping Woman, 1937
Pablo Picasso, Nude Woman in a Red Armchair, 1932

Tuesday, 14 February 2012

Lucian Freud Portraits - NPG

Lucian Freud, Man with a Feather (Self-portrait), 1943
Lucian Freud Portraits at the National Portrait Gallery until 27 May has been gathering (mostly) ecstatic revieres. Planned in collaboration with Freud who died last summer this is a monumental and fitting memorial.
Read reviews by Laura Cumming, Adrian Searle, Andrew Graham-Dixon.
Lucian Freud, Girl in a Dark Jacket, 1947
Lucian Freud, John Minton, 1952
Lucian Freud, Girl in Bed, 1952
Lucian Freud, Girl with a White Dog, 1950-1
Lucian Freud, Reflection (Self-portrait), 1985
Lucian Freud, Eli and David, 2005-06

Song Dong: Waste Not - The Curve, Barbican Centre

Song Dong: Waste Not is an intriguing exhibition in The Curve at the Barbican Centre until 12 June.
As reported in The New York Times in relation to the installation of the exhibition at MoMA in 2009, Waste Not represents the accumulated possessions of Zhao Xiangyuan. Mrs Zhao lived in Beijing with her husband and two children in a tiny house. The house became crammed with clothes, toiletries, buttons, ballpoint pens...which were used, recycled and hoarded - a seemingly extreme response to the Cultural Revolution's dictum of frugality in daily life. 
Mrs Zhao's son, Song Dong has now turned the contents of his childhood home, some 10,000 items into the installation Waste Not. The Guardian reports that, after Song's father died in 2002, depression turned his mother's thrift into hoarding and her house in Beijing was stuffed with clutter. "I asked her why she wanted to fill the room with what to me is rubbish, and she said: 'If I fill the room, the things remind me of your father.'"
See a video of Song Dong in conversation with Barbara London.