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Showing posts from October, 2025

The King’s Tour Artists

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Enlightening exhibition at Buckingham Palace as part of the summer opening of the palace of works by artists commissioned by King Charles to accompany him on official tours to record them. The pictures belong to the King's private art collection and feature of a variety of artists he has commissioned since 1985. Their brief is to draw or paint whatever inspires them on the trip. Forty-five artists have now been involved over seventy trips to ninety countries. The work was quite conventional but reflected the King's taste. They seem to amount to posh holiday postcards. My favourite was this work by Phillip Butah of an elephant sanctuary in Nairobi. Closed 28 September 2025 Reviews Times Telegraph

Louise Bourgeois: Drawings from the 1960s

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Interesting exhibition at the Courtauld Gallery of drawings by Lousie Bourgeois. The show featured works from the 1960s and highlighted Bourgeois daily practice of drawing. These works come from a period following course of psychoanalysis and a hiatus from the art world. The drawings echo her sculptures on show in another show in the gallery at the time as well as the curves of landscapes and bodies. They also move from a monotone period to using more colour. I didn't find myself responding to the works but I loved the quotes from Bourgeois on drawing such as "the drawings allow me to pinpoint and define anxiety. And to turn it at least into fear." and calling drawing "thought feathers".    Closed 14 September 2025

The Barber in London: Highlights from a Remarkable Collection

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Charming exhibition at the Courtauld Gallery featuring some star works from the Barber Collection. This is the second show of works from the Barber Collection in Birmingham which I have seen recently as it is currently being refurbished and its collection is on tour. This selection was a wonderful who's who of artists and formed a good overview of art history. From a small Bellini to Degas and Toulouse Lautrec there were many moments of meeting old friends and works I have seen in so many online talks. It was a lovely touch to show three works within the Courtauld's main galleries to highlight links between the two collections. A particularly good hang was the bringing together of two versions of an "Ecce Homo" by Van Dyck next to each other to give the opportunity to compare and contrast.   Closes 22 February 2026

Abstract Erotic: Louise Bourgeois, Eva Hesse, Alice Adams

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Baffling exhibition at the Courtauld Gallery of work by three female artists of the late 20th century. I found the concept of the "abstract erotic" wasn’t well explained and got confused with the idea of "eccentric abstraction" both coined by American art critic Lucy Lippard. As far as I can tell both involved the use of unex cepted materials and often took a sensual approach to abstraction. The first room contained works by all three artists to illustrate this. The second room devoted a section to each artists, Louise Bourgeois, Eva Hesse and Alice Adams, with an overview of their career and was more approachable. Closed 14 September 2025 Reviews Times Guardian Telegraph

Tai Shani: The Spell or The Dream

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Strange installation in the Edmond J Safra Fountain Court at Somerset House by Tai Shani. The main work was a giant, blue, sleeping, princess style figure in a glass box. As you got close to it you realised it appeared to be gently breathing. Reading the blurb it was meant to represent an archetypal, fairytale figure who has slept through the violence of colonialism, economic inequality and environmental collapse. I must admit I don’t think I would have understood any of that from the figure but I did find it quite mesmeric and compelling. The work was accompanied by a radio channel interviewing people on new ways of being collectively and a flag on the top of the venue. Closed 14 September 2025 Review Evening Standard