Friday, 7 December 2012

Oscar Niemeyer, 1907 - 2012


Oscar Niemeyer, Niterói Museum of Contemporary Art, 1996
Oscar Niemeyer died on 5 December 2012.
It is extraordinary to realise that Niemeyer, who has died at the age of 104, was working closely with no less a figure than Le Corbusier more than 70 years ago; Niemeyer first encountered him in 1929 and again later in 1936.
Niemeyer's late work (completed 1996) the Niterói Museum of Contemporary Art, across the bay from Rio de Janeiro, is hailed as 
a modern triumph, something that deserves to be considered alongside such great buildings as Frank Lloyd Wright's Fallingwater; Le Corbusier's chapel at Ronchamp and Mies van der Rohe's Farnworth house. (Glancey and Pawley)
However, Niemeyer's major monument will be the 'futuristic' city of Brasilia for which he designed all the principal public buildings.Many of these have become icons of Modernism. Not all commentators have been admiring. The late Robert Hughes (see below) was withering: in  Trouble in Utopia, a chapter in his essay on modern art, The Shock of the New, he wrote: 
Only one city in the West has ever been built from scratch along the strict, Corbusean schema of Utopian modernist town planning. Brasilia... was going to be the City of the Future - the triumph of sunlight, reason, and the automobile... It looked splendid in the drawings and photographs... The reality of the place is markedly less noble. Brasilia was finished... in 1960, and ever since then it has been falling to bits... It is a vast example of what happens when people design for an imagined Future, rather than for a real world.
Brasilia, in less than twenty years, ceased to be the City of Tomorrow and turned into yesterday's science fiction. It is an expensive and ugly testimony to the fact that, when men think in terms of abstract space rather than real place... they tend to produce miles of jerry-built nowhere... The experiment, one may hope, will not be repeated; the utopian buck stops here.(Robert Hughes (1980) "The Shock of the new", London: BBC, pp210-11)
For a more sympathetic and enthusiastic view, see obituary by Jonathan Glancey and Martin Pawley.
In 1987 Brasila was made a Unesco World Heritage Site.
Oscar Niemeyer, Le Corbusier, et al, Ministry of Education, Rio de Janeiro, 1950
Oscar Niemeyer, The National Congress, Brasilia, c 1960

Oscar Niemeyer , Cicillo Matarazzo pavilion in Ibirapuera Park, São Paulo, 1957 (?)
Oscar Niemeyer, The Centro Cultural Oscar Niemeyer in Asturias, Spain
Oscar Niemeyer, The Centro Cultural Oscar Niemeyer in Asturias, Spain

Oscar Niemeyer, auditorium in Ravello, Italy, 2009

Oscar Niemeyer, Niterói Museum of Contemporary Art, 1996

Friday, 23 November 2012

New Possibilities: Abstract Painting from the 70s - Piper Gallery

Albert Irvin, Glow, 1971
As a fan of British abstract painting of the 1970s I am thrilled to see that New Possibilities: Abstract Painting from the 70s is at the Piper Gallery until 21 December.
The exhibition features 14 artists, all born between 1922 and 1950, and still working today: Frank Bowling, Graham Boyd, Barrie Cook, William Henderson, Albert Irvin, Tess Jaray, Jeanne Masoero, C. Morey de Morand, Mali Morris, Patricia Poullain, Desmond Rayner, Alice Sielle, Trevor Sutton and Gary Wragg. 
Trevor Sutton, That Swing, 4. K, 1979
Barrie Cook, Blue, Red and Yellow Grid, 1977
Gary Wragg,  Carnival, 1977-79
Graham Boyd, Descender, 1976
Mali Morris, Purple Heart, 1979
Desmond Rayner, Bull's Eye, 1979
William Henderson, Funky, Black and Catch Me, 1978
Colette Moray de Morand, There is Always More, 1978
Frank Bowling, Rush Green, 1977