Showing posts with label Courtauld Gallery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Courtauld Gallery. Show all posts

19 April 2013

It's a bumper season for exhibitions in London

There are always great exhibitions worth visiting in London, often at smaller, less well known museums.  However, sometimes blockbuster shows hit town at the same time and this is one of those times. Londoners and visitors are frantically trying to get their hands on much sought after tickets for this spring's top shows.  I've been away from London for 2 months on my volunteering trip to Africa (read more here) so I was really keen to catch up.

In London right now we have  'David Bowie is' at the Victoria and Albert Museum, 'Manet: Portraying Life' at  the Royal Academy and  'Life and Death in Pompeii and Herculaneum' at the British Museum. Then there is 'Becoming Picasso: Paris 1901' at the Courtauld, 'Light Show' at the Hayward Gallery, 'Lichtenstein: A Retrospective' at the Tate Modern, 'Michael Caine: 80th Anniversary Exhibition' at the Museum of London, 'Treasures of the Royal Courts' at the V&A and many more......

I've been busy working my way through this impressive list so here's my quick tour for you to enjoy.

 
My favourite was the Bowie show which I didn't expect to enjoy as much as I did, not being sure it would live up to the hype around it. It was huge fun with brilliant staging, lots of good information and range of items to appeal to different visitors from videos to costumes to information about the context he was working in and was influencing. You are given high quality earphones that pick up the really interesting commentary and great music (of course!) as you move between rooms. The final room has a huge video wall where you can watch him singing 'Heroes'  at Live Aid in 1985 alongside a much more recent version. The song lifts the room and is a wonderful musical experience.  The title of the show is right - David Bowie is .... He is so many things and the exhibition follows his many ch-changes and showcases his immense creativity.








 

The British Museum hits back with its own blockbuster looking at the lost worlds of Pompeii and Herculaneum. The exhibition takes you through the everyday lives and the extraordinary events that overtook the citizens of these two towns in AD 79.  Rooms are laid out in the plan of a house with many artifacts -even a baby's cot - mosaics and paintings. We explore the towns, the reasons for the eruptions and the final crushing impact.  You do get an insight into the last hours of these towns and the finality of the end through the contorted figures of the dying. 




 

Manet's paintings are beautifully shown at the Royal Academy. The show focuses on his portraiture, ranging from figures of the day including his wife, to scenes of everyday life. We learn through a detailed timeline, what happened in his life. There were some truly beautiful paintings here including the one on the poster, although it was strange that one of his most famous A Bar at the Folies-Bergere is hanging just a mile or so away at the Courtauld Gallery.












 Picasso's early works are on show at the Courtauld Gallery. They hold regular special exhibitions which they house in just 2 room which gives these exhibitions real focus and they are really manageable!  Tho'   small, there are plenty of great works to see and it is amazing to know that these paintings where shown when he was just 19 years old. You can see hints of where his work will head to but the paintings at this early stage of his career are  masterpieces in their own right. I really enjoyed one of his brash self portraits full of energy and confidence.  He reinvents styles of major names such as Degas and Toulouse-Lautrec. The second room is more sombre, following the death of a close friend and this work is from the beginning of the Blue Period. Sadly one of the paintings here will leave the UK at the end of the show, his Child with a Dove could not be kept in the UK. 





The Light Show at the Hayward Gallery is a completely different experience as you have to get right into the exhibits - either by entering pitch black rooms or wearing foot covers to walk into another room or by taking your shoes off completely for a different room. In one room you see light as a solid beam you can break into with your hand, in others you see a bright single light as you enter but you eye adjusts and absorbs the  colour so  it becomes paler until you leave and re-enter and it is bright again. Other pieces show the beauty of light through constantly moving LEDs or reflecting light on mirrors to give as sense of infinity. Each room shows the work of a different artist so it's an endlessly engaging show which I really enjoyed.








Just one more to tell you about as I was less keen on the Treasures of the Royal Court and have not yet got to see the Lichtenstein as it's been quite a job to see this lot! The Michael Caine exhibition at the Museum of London was a small, fun exploration of his long career through film, quotes and photos.  As you can see from this quote there is a sense of fun in the show and the photos are mostly iconic shots of London born Michael. The films are clips from his famous movies such as Alfie and The Italian Job alongside TV interviews from when his was a new star to more recent reflective interviews on his long career.  It was fascinating to hear how he felt being the first east London actor with a proper London accent who broke into the big league of movies - at the time posh actors were imitating London voices if the parts required!





















There are plenty more shows to in London, just never enough time to see them all!

Bye for now.
Sue
www.itsyourlondon.co.uk
@itsyourlondon 

7 June 2011

Fun in the sun at Somerset House

You may have heard already and it's true, we are having great weather this year in London and this spring has been the warmest and driest on record. Londoners really know how to make the most of any bit of sunshine and my trip to Somerset House last week gave me the chance to see a perfect example of this. That visit was topped with a trip to the theatre to take in a new play.



Somerset House is an amazing place, dating from 1801 and is most famous to Brits as where all the birth certificates were kept. It was also: the nation's Stamp Office where every newspaper was stamped before distribution; where the Royal Academy of Arts began; and, the home to various government offices. It still houses government departments but it is more famous for its wonderful courtyard (which was once just a car park!) and fountains, its restaurant, its exhibition and the events in the courtyard. Currently in the courtyard is an amazing exhibition by Ai Weiwei, the famous Chinese artist who was behind the Olympic Birdsnest stadium in Beijing and the Sunflower Seeds exhibition of 100 million pieces in the Tate Modern. Sadly at the moment he is in prison in China but his work speaks out for him. Here we have 12 massive bronze animal heads depicting the traditional Chinese zodiac called Circle of Animals/Zodiac Heads. This is his first major outdoor exhibition in London and Somerset House's first outdoor modern sculpture display.

The day I went to see them was very warm and sunny so we could enjoy the heads while families enjoyed themselves running in and out of the fountains. People of all ages couldn't resist running through the changing fountains and the kids stripped off to their swimmers and there was no stopping them! We however enjoyed a light lunch at Tom's Kitchen within the main building and remained fully clothed!

Another good reason for visiting Somerset House is the Courtauld art gallery where you can view a wonderful collection ranging from some of the most famous impressionists and post impressionist work - Van Gogh, Manet, Renoir, Degas - and some more modern pieces - Bacon, Hepworth and Nicholson - and many older pieces too - Ruebens and Brueghel. For a mere £4.50 entry to what is termed a small museum, you can treat yourself to a journey through some great art.


Photos are: a view of the full courtyard; various shots of the zodiac heads and people playing in the fountains.

This week's theatre trip was to see Butley at the Duchess Theatre, a piece by set in the world of academia in the 1970s. The undoubted star of the play was Dominic West, playing the once great professor whose decent into drink has lead him to rail against the world and those closest to him. We were treated to a question and answer session with the whole cast afterwards which was great as we were in the front row for this and I was reminded of my close up moment with Dominic West when he was at the Donmar so here's our photo!


22 December 2010

'Twas the last blog before Christmas...

Nearly the end of the year and this is the last blog before Christmas, and depending on how the travelling goes next week, it could be the last of the year. England has had more snow than it can cope with on the roads, railways and at our airports which has been very sad for people trying to get home to be with friends and family for the festive period. I'm off to Kent first and then to Dartmouth for New Year so fingers crossed I get to both.... And I hope you get to where you want to be as well.
The last weeks of 2010 have been snow dominated which is really surprising for this time of year s we don't usually get this much snow until February and it's been colder than for many decades - global warning eh! London had a couple of major 'dumps' as they are called tho' it seems an odd word to me. So of course here are a set of photos from my locality including the biggest bus queue in London where at least 12 number 52s were stuck due to the smallest hill - poor show! See if you can spot the snowman...
Some of the best exhibitions are the small ones and I visited the Courtauld Gallery to see the Cezanne's Card Players series. He painted several of the same group in similar positions showing his appreciation of the peasants and their lives. It was wonderful and just this single room of paintings gave me a much deeper understanding of Cezanne. The Courtauld Gallery is a small gem which is packed full of great works and only £6 to get in!It is known for the its collection of impressionist and post impressionist masterpieces, thanks to the collector Samuel Courtauld It is the front part, the entrance gate, of the Somerset House complex which houses an ice rink at this time of year in its beautiful courtyard. I dropped in during a snow storm and it was good to see that this did not deter the brave skaters.



It's panto season so we booked into our local Notting Hill version of Sleeping Beauty which gave us the usual chaotic good fun show at the Tabernacle. It has plenty of improvisation (for which we mean - somewhat under-rehearsed!) and some great in-jokes and splendid acting from the tiniest of kids. We boo'd we hissed and chanted 'behind you' with the best of them and finished the show with full rendition of Slade's 'So here it is, merry Christmas'.... Very festive!




That's all for this year except to wish you all a very merry Christmas and a great 2011.

Bye for now,
Sue