Painting with Light, Tate Britain
Great exhibition of photographs and paintings from photographs; again, much of TB’s collection recycled (Sargent kids with lanterns, Clausen turnip choppers, Rosetti women), but justified on the whole. Standouts for me were Coburn’s photos of the river and Regents Canal, clearly influencing Whistler:
His portrait of the beautiful Elsie “Tootles” Thomas:
Tiny, but fabulous…
And Jane Morris, the model for Rosetti’s “Proserpine”:
He’s glammed her up, hasn’t he? Especially the lips…
Big exhibition, loads of interest, highly recommended.
Just off the main hall is a group of paintings from photographs by Walter Sickert. This goes nicely with the main exhibition as regards subject matter; Sickert seems to have used a pink grounding and a lot of scraping. One or two of these pictures are almost like Luc Tuymans or Gerhard Richter.
Etel Adnan, Sackler Gallery
Over by the Serpentine, the third great exhibition, that of the Israeli artist, whose earlier paintings of the 60s and 70s are far superior to those more figurative and simplified that are more recent. The early ones have great texture and colour and are strongly reminiscent of Nicholas de Stael and also Victor Pasmore (one or two):
Corbyn/Manson
Last blog, I made a facetious remark about Jeremy often being surrounded in photos by adoring young women in long summer dresses – like Manson Family members, I “joked”; Hadley Freeman in Saturday’s Guardian made a similar, but NOT facetious link, linking the apparent “cult of personality” to violence and anti-semitism in the Momentum camp. That will teach me…
Sorry, pathetically short blog this week; running out of steam in many ways.
All Day Breakfast
Blackpaint
1/08/16