Shape of Light: 100 Years of Photography and Abstract Art
Interesting exhibition at Tate Modern looking at photographers who have prioritised shape,
form and expression over recognisable subject matter and their role in the
wider history of abstract art.
I liked the fact that photographs were hung with abstract paintings of the same period so you could see the dialogue between photography and painting. However I admit I’m not a great fan of abstracts and as usual liked pictures where real things became abstract in the way they were shown rather than the pure abstracts.
The show did take you thought the different type of abstract art well and I came out feeling I understood its development better. It also looked at the development of photography and how that influenced this work.
I liked Judith Karasz’s close-ups of fabric and the Russian pictures of architecture and objects taken at strange angles. It was interesting to see Vortecist photographs and Brancusi’s pictures of his own work.
Closed on 14 October 2018
Reviews
Times
Guardian
Evening Standard
I liked the fact that photographs were hung with abstract paintings of the same period so you could see the dialogue between photography and painting. However I admit I’m not a great fan of abstracts and as usual liked pictures where real things became abstract in the way they were shown rather than the pure abstracts.
The show did take you thought the different type of abstract art well and I came out feeling I understood its development better. It also looked at the development of photography and how that influenced this work.
I liked Judith Karasz’s close-ups of fabric and the Russian pictures of architecture and objects taken at strange angles. It was interesting to see Vortecist photographs and Brancusi’s pictures of his own work.
Closed on 14 October 2018
Reviews
Times
Guardian
Evening Standard
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