Visual arts
Rachel Whiteread, Tate Britain review – exceptional beautyWednesday, 13 September 2017![]() The gallery walls of Tate Britain have been taken down so turning a warren of interlinking rooms into a large, uncluttered space in which Rachel Whiteread’s sculptures are arranged as a single installation. What a challenge! And curators Ann... Read more... |
DVD: Every Picture Tells a StoryFriday, 08 September 2017![]() James Scott’s filmography is wide-ranging, including the 1982 short film A Shocking Accident, based on the Graham Greene story, which won an Academy Award the following year, and other works on social questions. But these documentaries, several... Read more... |
h.Club 100 Awards: Art, Design and Craft - weaving magic at Dovecot Tapestry StudioTuesday, 05 September 2017![]() Art, design and craft is such a broad category that it is no surprise – even less a criticism – that most of the nominees comfortably inhabit just one of these areas of endeavour. Nominated principally in recognition of The Caged Bird’s Song, made... Read more... |
Sue Steward 1946-2017: She came, she saw, she salsa'dMonday, 28 August 2017![]() Sue Steward, who died suddenly last week from a brain haemorrhage, was one of theartsdesk’s most loved members, her free spirit and her double specialism in world music and photography making her an intrinsic asset to this pioneering critics’ site... Read more... |
James Hamilton: Gainsborough - A Portrait review - an artistic life told with verve and enthusiasmSunday, 06 August 2017![]() James Hamilton’s wholly absorbing biography is very different from the usual kind of art historical study that often surrounds such a major figure as Thomas Gainsborough (1727-1788). Hamilton is positively in love with his subject, and writes with... Read more... |
Matisse in the Studio, Royal Academy review - a fascinating compilationFriday, 04 August 2017![]() A 19th-century silver and wood pot in which to make chocolate, pertly graceful; 17th-century blue and white Delftware; a Chinese calligraphy panel; a 19th-century carved wooden god from the Ivory Coast; a bronze and gold earth goddess from South-... Read more... |
Trajal Harrell: Hoochie Koochie, Barbican review - flamboyant and mesmerisingSaturday, 22 July 2017Two performers rush down the stairs and sweep through the audience, their designer outfits splaying out as they speed elegantly around the gallery and disappear as quickly as they came. Thus begins a series of performances that are an intriguing mix... Read more... |
Rose Finn-Kelcey: Life, Belief and Beyond, Modern Art Oxford review - revelation and delightWednesday, 19 July 2017![]() Rose Finn-Kelcey was one of the most interesting and original artists of her generation. Yet when she died in 2014 at the age of 69, she could have disappeared from view if she not spent the last few years of her life assembling a monograph about... Read more... |
Enter theartsdesk's Young Reviewer of the Year AwardSaturday, 15 July 2017![]() The Hospital Club’s annual h.Club100 awards celebrate the most influential and innovative people working in the UK’s creative industries, with nominations from the worlds of film and fashion, art, advertising, theatre, music, television and more.... Read more... |
The Encounter, National Portrait Gallery review - dazzlingly evocative drawingsFriday, 14 July 2017![]() As a line flows or falters, registering each slight change in pressure, pause, or occasional reworking, it seems to offer a glimpse into the mind of the artist at work. The line is the instrument of the artist’s eye, the often unpolished,... Read more... |
theartsdesk in Antwerp: Richard Deacon says nothingTuesday, 11 July 2017![]() Something like a parked zeppelin sits on three mirrored legs on a museum lawn in Belgium. It’s a cigar-shaped steel fabrication that, were it to float free of its three legs, could also pass for a UFO. But given the context - a sculpture park... Read more... |
theartsdesk at Les Rencontres d'Arles: breadth and depth at the veteran photo festivalSaturday, 08 July 2017![]() Now in its 48th year the veteran photography festival is in better shape than ever. You can walk through the French sunshine to more than 20 exhibitions, hear a talk, meet the snappers and shop on the fringe. It's not just a show; it's a holiday,... Read more... |
