British Art News

The latest news in Modern and Contemporary British Art.

by Alex Leith

Fair News Ramsay Fairs Fair News Ramsay Fairs

THE INGRAM COLLECTION

The Ingram Collection of Modern British & Contemporary Art is one of the UK’s most significant art collections and we are pleased to announce a partnership for our 2022 edition.

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SIMON LEWTY | CALLIGRAPHICAL PALIMPSESTS

“Should I call it presence in absence, or absence in presence, or both? It’s something of that order.”

Was there a more enigmatic 21st-century British artist than Simon Lewty, whose work was evolving in mysterious ways right until his death, aged 80, in January?

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ANITA KLEIN | EVERYDAY DIVINITY

It would be easy to walk past an Anita Klein work, without paying it the scrutiny it deserves.

On the face of it, her subject matter is quotidian, familial, twee even. A dark-haired, early-middle-aged female figure is usually involved in some sort of activity with her friends or family: planting seedlings; playing snakes and ladders; swimming in the rain, stirring sugar into an espresso.

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WATERAID ANNOUNCED AS OFFICIAL CHARITY FOR 2022

British Art Fair announces a partnership with WaterAid which will see a collection of site-specific climate-themed works go under the hammer at this year’s fair to raise awareness of the devastating impact of climate change on vulnerable communities’ access to clean water.

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WATERAID CHARITY AUCTION

Established artists, emerging artists and celebrities who are not generally considered as artists have been asked to produce work to go ‘under the hammer’ at a charity auction on Thursday 29.

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CHARLES GINNER | CAVE PAINTING

The Cave of the Golden Calf, London’s first-ever night club, was opened in July 1912 by writer and socialite Frida Strindberg, as a space for artists and other bohemian types looking for a spot which, as the New York Times put it, was ‘brazenly expressive of the libertarian pleasure principle’. It was in a low-ceilinged basement in Heddon Street in Soho (formerly a draper’s studio) and great attention was paid to its interior design, with primitivist wall paintings by Wyndham Lewis, Spencer Gore and Charles Ginner.

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WEST WALTON | JOHN PIPER’S LOVE OF ‘EXQUISITE DECAY’

John Piper (1903-1992) was a remarkable polymath, a writer and editor as well as a prolific artist, who worked across numerous genres and styles, from abstract painting to opera set design to stained-glass windows. But he will, perhaps, be best remembered as a draughtsman and painter of gloweringly picturesque landscapes, with a penchant for historic English buildings. And particularly buildings which had deteriorated into what he described as ‘an exquisite state of decay’.

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THIS IS TOMORROW

Michael Bird’s latest book – this is tomorrow - follows familiar terrain, taking the reader on an entertaining ride through the history of the British Modernist art movement, from its roots in the 1870s, to the turn of the millennium.

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