British Art News
The latest news in Modern and Contemporary British Art.
by Alex Leith
Bloomsbury-on-Mediterrané | FCB Cadell in Cassis
FCB Cadell (pronounced to rhyme with ‘Paddle’) is often referred to as the ‘most Scottish’ of the four Scottish colourists, as much of his work depicted the interior of his sumptuous studio at Ainslie Place in the Georgian New Town of Edinburgh, or the landscape of the Inner Hebridean island of Iona, where he used to spend every summer. He often sported a kilt, in the Campbell tartan, albeit set off with a yellow waistcoat…
Ubiquitous | David Hockney at the NPG
The National Portrait Gallery’s 2020 exhibition of portraits painted (and otherwise created) by David Hockney closed after just 22 days, due to governmental Covid restrictions. Hockney has since continued to invite sitters to his Normandy studio – including pop singer Harry Styles, pictured above – and 33 of these will be included in a new version of the exhibition, Drawing from Life, to be displayed at the National Portrait Gallery in November. Tickets have gone on sale this week…
Touché | Bruce Bernard, by Lucian Freud
Meet, if you dare, the inscrutable glare of Bruce Bernard, a man who didn’t suffer fools gladly, as depicted in 1985 – aged 57 - by his lifelong friend Lucian Freud, about whom the same could be said.
Freud’s etching of Bernard – supplied by Julian Page - is to be shown in Crossing Borders: Internationalism in Modern Art, a stand-alone exhibition at British Art Fair 2023, featuring émigré artists who came to Britain from all over the world during the 20th century.
Ping-pong king | Henry Moore anniversary
Happy 125th birthday Henry Moore, sculptor, draftsman… and accomplished ping-pong player.
Moore was born on July 30 1898, in Castleford, Yorkshire. His father worked at the local pit, but was determined his seven children should pursue different careers, and Moore decided to become a sculptor at the age of 11. Art was not his only passion, however. He was also a table-tennis enthusiast…
A very female gaze | Paula Rego at the National Gallery
There’s double reason to go to the National Gallery this week, with one stunning temporary exhibition just opened, and another set to close.
First up, Crivelli’s Garden, the monumental mural created thirty years ago by the late Paula Rego. Rego’s work stretches ten metres across and depicts female characters from the Bible, the Golden Legend (a medieval compilation of the lives of the saints) and other traditional folklore sources, reimagined through Rego’s very female gaze.
A delicious country | John Craxton at Osborne Samuel
‘I can’t tell you how delicious this country is,’ wrote a 23-year-old John Craxton to his friend Elsie ‘EQ’ Nicholson, from Athens, on May 20, 1946. ‘…the lovely hot sun all day & at night tavernas: hot prawns in olive oil & great wine & the soft sweet smell of Greek pine trees. I shall never come home. How can I?’.
A surrealist snap | Eileen Agar at Austin/Desmond
1936 was quite a year for Eileen Agar. In the spring she was visited in her studio by Roland Penrose and Herbert Read, who, to her surprise, declared her a surrealist and selected two paintings and five objects for inclusion in the International Surrealist Exhibition they were organising at the New Burlington Galleries in Mayfair, running from June 11 to July 4.
Pop went the Easel | Derek Boshier at Whitford Fine Art
“I’m very interested in the whole set-up of the American influence in this country,” states the 24-year-old Derek Boshier, rather earnestly, in Ken Russell’s seminal BBC documentary Pop Goes the Easel, made and broadcast in 1962. “In the infiltration of the American way of life. It’s through advertising… that this infiltration has come through”.
Her version of real | Chantal Joffe, Scarlett and Lola
“I don’t find men very interesting to look at,” Chantal Joffe told the Telegraph a few years ago. She doesn’t feel the same way about women: her subject matter is almost always portraiture of female figures. She paints her mother, she paints her daughter Esme, she paints herself, unflinchingly (in 2018 she produced a self-portrait every day of the year), and she paints friends, and friends’ children, such as Scarlett and Lola (pictured) who have featured in her work since they were toddlers…
A path through all the patterns | Kate Montgomery at Long & Ryle
A strange thing happened at the private view of Long & Ryle’s solo exhibition of the paintings of Kate Montgomery, in Pimlico on Wednesday evening (June 29th). The wine was flowing, and there was a convivial atmosphere, as the Brighton-based artist, up for the evening, held court. But, in any photographs taken of the party, there won’t have been many faces in shot: just lots of backs of heads. I’ve never been to an art opening at which so many people spent so long looking at the art.
Naughty, but nice | Pop artist Deborah Azzopardi
Donald McGill… meet Roy Lichtenstein. Deborah Azzopardi paints sexy, saucy, cartoonish scenes in bright colours on large canvases.
Women pull their tops over their heads; louchely lean their long stiletto-tipped legs out of convertible sports cars, and put their fingers in front of their full lips, as if to whisper ‘Shhhh! Let’s keep this our little secret.’
Seminal Smash | Bridget Riley at the Morgan, NY
On February 9th, 1965, The Beatles appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show for the first time, in front of a record live TV audience of 73 million Americans, starting their set with All My Loving, and ending it with She Loves You. Beatlemania had crossed the Atlantic.
Increasingly abstract | Printmaker Alistair Grant
Alistair Grant, who died in 1997, left a huge body of work behind him. His estate and archive is represented by the Eastbourne-based gallery Emma Mason British Prints, which will be presenting at the British Art Fair for the first time this Autumn, and showing a number of his prints and paintings. Most of the pieces Grant produced for The Rebel have disappeared, alas, so don’t expect to see any of his Hancock works, such as Ducks in Flight around the Eiffel Tower, Exhaust Fumes on a Wet Thursday Night, or Sodium Light on a Left Buttock.
On the prowl in Oxfordshire | John Lendis at Stratford Gallery
If there’s one place where mankind can claim victory in the struggle to tame and colonise nature, it’s got to be the Cotswolds. Which is probably why the ‘Beast of Burford’ – a black panther supposedly on the prowl in Oxfordshire – has become such a popular local legend. The painter John Lendis has made the Cotswolds his home, after spells abroad and is fond of inhabiting his landscapes of the area with repeated motifs: of foxes, angels and Landrover Defenders.
Gary Lineker looks on in disgust
How long do you need to take in the 1,613 works in this year’s Royal Academy Summer Exhibition, co-ordinated by the genial octogenarian water-colourist David Remfry?
Threshold of the modern History of the New, at the Fine Art Society
A big welcome to the Fine Art Society, exhibiting for the first time at the British Art Fair this Autumn.
‘A volley of fish heads’ British Impressionists at David Messum
One can safely assume that Laura Knight’s Baiting Lines, Staithes (c1900) was not painted on a Sunday.
Interview with Simon Shore, owner of Stow Art House
Interview with first-time exhibitor at British Art Fair, Simon Shore of Stow Art House.
Bloomsbury Stud | Stephen Tomlin at Philip Mould
In 1923 the author David ‘Bunny’ Garnett introduced Stephen Tomlin to the Bloomsbury group. Tomlin, nicknamed ‘Tommy’, was a 22-year-old sculptor: intelligent, good looking and very, very charming. He was also bisexual and incurably promiscuous, hence the title of this exhibition at Philip Mould’s Pall Mall gallery (borrowed from a recent biography by Michael Bloch and Susan Fox, which has enjoyed a republication to coincide with the show).
Bloomsbury Stud: The Art of Stephen Tomlin, Philip Mould & Company, until August 11.
Richard Hamilton at Tate Britain | Swingeing London
Tate Britain director Alex Farquharson’s rehang of Tate Britain, revealed to the public on May 23, has been much derided in the press. The Guardian called it ‘vacuous, worthy and dull’; the FT suggested a ‘hectoring’ and ‘self-righteous’ tone to the labelling. But there are, to be fair, many positives to come out of it, and one is that the British pop artist Richard Hamilton has been given his own room.