Monday, 10 February 2014

Stuart Hall, 1932 - 2014

Dawoud Bey, Stuart Hall, 1998
Stuart Hall died on 10 February 2014.
The passing of Stuart Hall is a big loss. While his scholarship and contributions to the fields of sociology and cultural studies were profound (his ideas have affected me deeply and have informed my own teaching) I think most of all he will be missed for his intelligent analysis of politics and culture and for simply being an extraordinarily decent and charming person.
Read an obituary in The Guardian and by Roger Bromley; read an article by Stuart Jeffries, and an interview with Zoe Williams; listen to an interview with Laurie Taylor recorded in 2011 and Laurie Taylor's 'Thinking Allowed' tribute; watch him talking about Represention and the Media.
Stuart Hall (far right) with associates of The New Left Review, 1960s

Saturday, 1 February 2014

Hannah Höch - Whitechapel Gallery

Hannah Höch, Untitled (from an Ethnographic Museum), 1930

Hannah Höch is at Whitechapel Gallery until 23 March 2014.
Höch is probably best known (perhaps only known) for her complex 1919 photocollage Cut with the Kitchen Knife through the Beer-Belly of the Weimar Republic (below) - which is not included in the current exhibition (too fragile to travel, I believe) -  so it is really interesting to see the breadth of the work she made from the 1910s through to the 1970s. The standout work is, unquestionably, the series of  photocollages she made in Germany in the 1920s and 30s in the wake of the First World War and into the period of the Third Reich.
Hannah Höch, Cut with the Kitchen Knife through the Beer-Belly of the Weimar Republic, 1919
Hannah Höch, Untitled (from an Ethnographic Museum), 1929
Hannah Höch, Fashion Show, 1925-35
Hannah Höch, Untitled (from an Ethnographic Museum), 1929
Hannah Höch, Flight, 1931
Hannah Höch, Made for a Party, 1936
Hannah Höch, photographed in 1926

Saturday, 25 January 2014

Paul Klee - Tate Modern

Paul Klee, Greeting, 1922
Paul Klee: Making Visible is at Tate Modern until 9 March 2014.
This comprehensive exhibition of Klee's work has been at Tate Modern since last autumn and has garnered some ecstatic reviews (see below). Klee is especially celebrated for his visual inventiveness, wit and lightness of touch - his exemplary visual adventures arising from 'taking a line for a walk'. At his best he certainly is charming - I especially liked the 'fish' pictures, but I also found some of the more fully abstract works were a relief from the whimsicality and sheer sweetness that continually threaten to overwhelm in this large exhibition.
Read reviews by Laura Cumming, Adrian Searle, Richard Dorment and Adrian Hamilton.
Paul Klee, They're Biting, 1920
Paul Klee, Fish Magic, 1925
Paul Klee, Comedy, 1921
Paul Klee, A Young Lady's Adventure, 1922
Paul Klee, Steps, 1929
Paul Klee, Fire at Full Moon, 1933

Friday, 17 January 2014

Michael Wolf: Architecture of Density - Flowers Gallery

Michael Wolf, Architecture of Density #39, 2005
Michael Wolf's amazing photographs of Hong Kong, Architecture of Density, are at Flowers, Cork Street until 22 February 2014.
Michael Wolf, Architecture of Density #119, 2009
Michael Wolf, Architecture of Density #13b, 2009
Michael Wolf, Architecture of Density #75, 2009
Michael Wolf, Architecture of Density, Scout #7
Michael Wolf, From My Favourite Thing
Michael Wolf, From My Favourite Thing

Friday, 10 January 2014

Picasso Linocuts - British Museum

Pablo Picasso, Still Life under the Lamp, 1962
Two linocuts by Picasso, along with the progressive proofs, have been acquired by the British Museum and are on display until 6 May 2014.
Both prints, the monochrome Jacqueline Reading, and the absolutely gorgeous Still Life under the Lamp, date from 1962 when Picasso was 81.  
Watch a video explaining Picasso's method devised for Still Life which was made by progressively cutting and printing from the same block rather than cutting a block for each colour. Read the Museum's press release.
Pablo Picasso, Jacqueline Reading, 1962