Bill Jacklin: The Graphic Work 1961-2016
Lovely exhibition
at the Royal Academy of print works by Bill Jacklin covering the last 55 years.
I liked the way
each room showed a different period. The first room also looked at technique
and included etching plates and sketch books as well as finished prints. I
loved a series of prints called “Anemones” which showed a vase of the flowers
from their perfect picked state through various stages of the petals falling.
The prints become more and more abstract and decorative as the petals fall.
There were some
great prints of New York. I love his sense of light even the work are often
monotone. There is also a wonderful sense of movement in the simplified
figures. Sometimes this is just a sense of a mass of people moving rather than
individuals.
Interestingly
most of the more recent work as monoprint, which are one off art works. There
was a good description of his technique of dropping turpentine onto the plates
to create a droplet effect on the image.
Closed on 28
August 2016
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