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Posts Tagged "hayward gallery"

Video of the Week: Southbank Centre Celebrates the Festival of Britain

This week’s video comes from the Southbank Centre, and is a tantalizing glimpse at what’s coming up for the venue this summer.

The Southbank Centre is celebrating the 60th anniversary of the Festival of Britain with a four-month festival of British culture and creativity.

Highlights include Ray Davies curating Meltdown  in June; a major show by Tracey Emin at the Hayward Gallery (18 May to 29 August); plus appearances by Lang Lang, Heston Blumenthal, Billy Bragg, John Berger, Meera Syal and Tony Benn.

Themed weekends celebrate some of the highlights of British culture: a weekend of comedy and music curated by Stewart Lee (27 to 30 May), a hip-hop weekend (22 to 24 July) and Wayne Hemingway’s vintage weekend (29 to 31 July).

Find out more here.

Are you excited about the Festival of Britain 2011? Let us know in the comments below.

London Exhibitions: Last Chance to See

If you’ve been meaning to see Gauguin at Tate Modern or Diaghilev at the V&A, now’s your last chance. Many high-profile London exhibitions are closing over the next fortnight to make way for exciting new shows.

These exhibitions are all in their final days – catch them while you can!

Closing 9 January 2011:

Closing 16 January 2011:

Five London Art Exhibitions to Look Forward to in 2011

As we wave goodbye to a year of blockbuster exhibitions from Van Gogh to Gauguin, it’s time to look forward to next year’s art shows. Here are five sure-fire hits for 2011.

  • Miró, Tate Modern, 14 Apr-11 Sep
    The first retrospective of Surrealist painter Joan Miró’s work in London for nearly 50 years
  • Degas Dancers, Royal Academy, 17 Sep-11 Dec
    A landmark exhibition featuring Edgar Degas’ famous paintings and sculptures of young ballerinas
  • Afghanistan: Crossroads of the Ancient World, British Museum, 3 Mar-3 Jul
    More than 200 ancient objects from the National Museum of Afghanistan in Kabul
  • Tracey Emin: Love is What You Want, Hayward Gallery, 18 May-29 Aug
    The first-ever major survey of Tracey Emin’s work in London
  • Glamour of the Gods: Hollywood Portraits, National Portrait Gallery, 7 Jul-23 Oct
    Film portraits from the industry’s golden age, the period from 1920 to 1960

Let me know what you’re excited about seeing at London’s art galleries in 2011 in the comments below.

London Exhibitions: Last Chance to See

Every September, the current crop of London exhibitions close to make way for exciting new shows. That means it’s your last chance to see some of the summer’s hottest exhibitions…

Closing on 5 September:

Closing later this month:

But don’t worry, there’s plenty to look forward to this autumn. Major new exhibitions include Gauguin, Treasures from Budapest, Serge Diaghilev and the Golden Age of the Ballets Russes, and the Turner Prize.

Ed Ruscha Exhibition Opens Today

Standard Station, Ed Ruscha

The Hayward Gallery‘s new exhibition, Ed Ruscha: 50 Years of Painting opens today.

The exhibition celebrates the American artist’s 50 year career with a retrospective of his work.

On display are 78 striking paintings, from bold images with playful words, to haunting black and white silhouettes.

Ed Ruscha was at yesterday morning’s press view and explained how he paints ideas rather than scenes. He also said there are a few more of his works “in the refrigerator,” which have never yet been exhibited.

The Hayward Gallery’s director, Ralph Rugoff also talked about Ruscha’s amazing contribution to the art world – how he introduced language into painting by painting words, how his work continued to evolve in each decade, and how he has influenced countless modern artists.

Ruscha is like an old friend of The Hayward Gallery, as his work was exhibited in a pop art show during the gallery’s first year, back in 1969.

The gallery will be closing from February to May 2010, and we know we’re going to miss it! So make sure you see Ed Ruscha: 50 Years of Painting before then.

Walking In My Mind at Hayward Gallery

Yayoi Kusuma, Dots Obsession 2004, © Yayoi Kusama 2009, Photo: Yayoi Kusama Studio

Yayoi Kusuma, Dots Obsession 2004, © Yayoi Kusama 2009, Photo: Yayoi Kusama Studio

The Hayward Gallery has gone all John Malkovich on us with their surreal, new exhibition Walking In My Mind. Through a series of giant works and sculptures, ten artists invite us to enter their imaginations.

The exhibition begins before you even step foot inside the Hayward. Along the sunny Southbank, 24 trees have been wrapped in red spotted fabric. It’s the brainwave of iconic Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama – a life-long dot-obsessive, according to a recent interview in The Guardian.

Of course, all art is about stepping into the artist’s imagination, but in Walking In My Mind it is a much more physical, adventurous experience. It was also darker, funnier and more bizarre than I expected. 

Scottish-born artist Charles Avery had me chuckling out loud with his inventive project The Islanders. As well as sketches of life on his imaginary island, Avery displays his ‘souvenirs’, including Stone-mice (“part rodent, part mineral”), which look suspiciously like normal stones, and a Bejewelled Hare – stuffed and brandishing its bling like a hip-hop superstar.

Thomas Hirschhorn’s Cavemanman was even more surreal. His uneven maze of tiny caves and tunnels, made of cardboard and plastered in brown parcel tape, was like something out of a postman’s nightmare.

But there was a darker side to the exhibition too. Walking through Chiharu Shoita’s After The Dream was quite unsettling. The painstakingly woven web of wool – Shoita told me it took a week to complete – felt like a swarm of bats that could get caught in your hair any second. 

Yayoi Kusama’s new work, Dots Obession, has become the ‘face’ of the exhibition so I was eager to see this. For me, the red spotted shapes worked best on the Southbank and on the bright, green Astroturf of the Hayward’s sculpture terrace, where they looked vibrant and delightfully out of place.

One of the curators Mami Kataoka pointed out that while a doctor can visually see the brain, the mind itself has no boundaries – “there is no shape”. This sense of freedom in self-expression has produced an exhibition that really does blow your mind.

Inspired by the exhibition and want to discuss your views? Head along to the Hayward’s free workshop Talking In My Mind on 5 July.