Showing posts with label tate modern. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tate modern. Show all posts

Sunday, 19 June 2011

London's Calling

On Friday I went up to London for the first time in a while to see some new exhibitions before they all finished. First I headed to Whitechapel Gallery to see one of my favourite photographers Paul Graham. I love his snapshot style portraits that capture the individual perfectly. His vibrant colours and great compositions make his portraits unique and inspiring in so many ways. The exhibition covered the various projects throughout his impressive photographic career. I absolutely loved it and the exhibition catalogue is definitely on my birthday list!















I then headed on down to Tate Modern, one of my favourite exhibition spaces to see some of my favourite pieces in their permanent collection as well as having a look at what they have new to show. I was pleasantly surprised to view an exhibition of Diane Arbus, one of my favourite photographers, as well as Burke + Norfolk: Photographs from the war in Afghanistan, and a piece of work by an unknown photographer to myself, Tayrn Simon.

Diane Arbus









The Burke + Norfolk exhibition was really fascinating, Simon Norfolk went back to some of the sights John Burke photographed back in the C19th, recapturing contemporary versions of Burke's original Afghanistan images. The exhbition was really thought provoking and I loved Norfolk's vibrant, beautiful images of a war torn country, avoiding directly rephotographing Burke's original images and staying away from the cliched black and white war torn images, instead showing beautiful parts of the country along with war images.









I love London, it is definitely my favourite city and I am so lucky to live so close. I always just pop up, without planning to see anything in particular and love just wandering around the art galleries all around London and finding out about new artists. So I encourage you all to just take a day out your busy schedules, head up to London and just wander around all the art galleries. Apart from the big exhibitions it's always free to do so!

Sunday, 27 June 2010

Tate Modern to the Tate Britain

A week or so again I took a trip up to London to the Tate Modern and then took a ride along the Thames to the Tate Britain.

First I shall talk about the Tate Modern exhibition "Exposed. Voyeurism, Surveillance and the Camera" which was all about looking at pictures made on the sly, without the permission of the "model". The pictures presented a shocking and witty perspective on iconic and taboo subjects to do with peoples rights within photography. Nowadays, in a world where you need to get permission from thousands of different avenues to be a photographer and photograph people it was a really fascinating concept.

There was one picture, shown below, by Harry Callahan that I loved,
However, generally I found the photography itself poor. Whilst I loved the concept of the exhibition and the whole idea of the "unseen photographer" after the first few rooms I became bored and felt some of the work just wasn't very good. It was intriguing to see the world like a "Peeping Tom", I felt rather invasive looking at all these photographs that had been taken without the subjects knowledge or permission. In a world where the public is obsessed with celebrities every move, causing them to be followed with a camera permanently stuck in their faces, whist the rest of us are watched 24/7 by surveillance cameras it was only time until someone made this form of photography into art and who better than the Tate Modern to display it. Photographs of celebrities fleeing the paparazzi, unknown civilians captured by hidden cameras and even private intimate moments caught on camera by spying neighbours, it really dealt with the idea of how watched we really are.

Thus, whilst I thought the majority of the images were poor, bar the first two rooms, it is definitely an exhibition worth seeing, if not for the images for the fantastic concept behind them.

Exhibition on until 3rd October '10

Next we have the Tate Britain which was holding an exhibition I was desperate to see on Henry Moore.

Moore was one of Britain's greatest artists and his sculptures have always been some of my favourite art with ideas from primitive art and surrealism always seen as key sources of inspiration for his work. The way he depicts the female form to show his new ideas of sexuality is something key in many of the sculptures. However, what I did not realise until this exhibition was his work on the war, with grim drawings of people sheltering underground and sculptures of fallen soldiers and war helmets. I did not realise quite how talented he was at drawing as well as his beautiful sculptures.

The exhibition was beautiful, showing how Moore's career began and developed. The range of materials and different scales he worked with was mind boggling. My favourite works by him was definitely the small bronze statue of figures on rocking chairs, with a wonderful texture and detail compared with the giant wooden sculptures, smooth and beautifully carved. Take an hour out of your day to go see Henry Moore's work. It is definitely worth it!

Exhibition ends 8th August '10



Wednesday, 12 May 2010

Irving Penn at the National Portrait Gallery


Yesterday I finally went to see the Irving Penn exhibition at the National Portrait and boy was it worth the wait! Penn's portraits are absolutely stunning and he has always been a great inspiration to me. With each portrait one could easily tell who the sitter was and learn a little about what they did. Penn manages to get such honesty from the sitter and I felt such an intimacy with the person which I feel many other portrait photographers fail to achieve. I had such a fantastic time and really did not want to leave and definitely bought the catalogue!

However, the catalogue was a little disappointing compared to how great the exhibition was. It didn't contain the whole exhibition and some of my favourite images weren't included. Although Irving Penn's other books are definitely a lot more successful in my opinion, this one was still worth buying just as a momentum of the exhibition as unfortunately there were no postcards of it for a sale, which I was a little annoyed about as I like to collect a few postcards of my favourite images from any exhibitions I go to. The exhibition is only on for another few weeks and so I encourage anyone and everyone who gets a chance to go see it!




I also visited the Tate Modern as I hadn't been there for a while and always love the variety of exhibitions they have on as well as their permanent exhibition, which is always worth going back to! There wasn't anything in particular I went to see but two exhibitions were really enjoyable.



The first was "Van Doesburg and the International Avant-Garde - Constructing a New World" which I knew nothing of and suprised me at how much I liked it! It was a unique and exciting chance for van Doesburg's work to be seen for the first time in the UK and his follows in the footsteps of a series of exhibitions looking at different aspects of Modernism, conceived by Vicente Todolí, Director of Tate Modern.
"Van Doesburg, who worked in disciplines within art, design and text, founded the far-reaching movement and magazine De Stijl. This artistic movement of painters, architects and designers sought to build a new society in the aftermath of World War I, advocating an international style of art and design based on a strict geometry of horizontals and verticals.
Van Doesburg travelled extensively in Europe in the 1920s making connections and collaborating with avant-garde contemporaries of the time. This exhibition explores Doesburg's role as promoter of Dutch Neoplasticism, his Dada personality, his efforts to influence the Bauhaus, his links with international Constructivists, and his creation of the group Art Concret. Including over 350 works (many unseen in the UK before) by key artists as Jean Arp, Constantin Brancusi, László Moholy-Nagy, Piet Mondrian, Francis Picabia, Gerrit Rietveld, Kurt Schwitters and Sophie Taeuber, the exhibition features van Doesburg's rarely-seen Counter-Composition paintings and designs for the Café Aubette in Strasbourg, furniture such as Rietveld's iconic Red-Blue chair, as well as typography, magazines, stained glass, film, music, sculpture and more."
The exhibition was colourful, experimental and exciting and I ended up buying the catalogue as I wanted to learn more about this 'Avant-Garde' art movement that I knew nothing of. Although I was not familiar with his work I had seen some exhibitions from others also showcased like Piet Mondrian and Francias Picabia, but otherwise was clueless about the movement and the other artists. Again this was an exhibition worth seeing, full of sculptures, films, paintings and a whole mix of different art media. I throughly enjoyed it and recommend it to others but hurry it ends on the 16th May!

The other artist was Simryn Gill who had a room containing her current project "Dalam" which situated within the exhibition entitled "Photographic Typologies". The five-room display gathers a range of artists who use photography to approach a topic or theme systematically, creating multiple images of similar subjects.
Gill's display "Dalam" was a room filled with many pictures of various rooms. The rooms were all photographed in the same medium format, from the same height and the same lighting. The 258 photographs that form Dalam, (Malay for deep; inside; interior), are the outcome of Simryn Gill’s travel across the Malaysian Peninsula over an 8 week period. Gill knocked on the doors of strangers and asked if she could enter their houses to photograph their living rooms. Perhaps surprisingly, most said yes, and the resulting works are a fascinating index of how people live as well as conveying why the artist undertook this project.
The project was a fascinating documentation of people's homes and I loved the whole concept and technicalities behind the body of work. However I thought the way the photographs were displayed in the Tate Modern was a little... well sloppy. Each images top corners were nailed to the wall and whilst I liked the simplicity of the display, I felt that all four corners should have been secured down as the bottom was flapping away from the wall which slightly ruined the impact from the mass of images. Yet still a fantastic project with a great idea and wonderfully colourful images. Another exhibitions worth seeing and I will definitely be looking up more of Gill's work.