Showing posts with label Review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Review. Show all posts

Monday, 23 February 2015

Late Turner: Painting Set Free

Last month I visited Tate Britain for the Late Turner Exhibition. It ran from September 2014 to January 2014 and I managed to see it on its very last weekend! Unlike the last exhibition I visited at the Tate I had to buy my own ticket because I am no longer a student (boooo). While £15 entry burned a sizeable hole in my post-student-indebted pocket, I was happy to have spent money on it.






Pictured above is Tate Britain's pocket size exhibition guide that you get for free on the door to any given exhibition, they're very cute and pocket sized. It's probably smaller than your HTC or Iphone 6 (it's probably not). This will be my point of reference for all the factual stuff. 

Right, so. The exhibition space for the Tate Modern consists of 6 rooms, They are all moderately sized (except for room 4) and therefore for your £15 you get a lot of artsy things to look at. I say artsy things because curators are increasingly keen to mix things up a little bit. This is because as charity run galleries, museums and historical organisations are becoming the norm (English Heritage is becoming a charity in April!), and state run organisations are having their budgets squeezed, they can no longer rely on being kept afloat thanks to David C & Co. They need to draw in a larger audience.

You'll get the paintings that you expect from an art exhibition but alongside that you can expect diary entries, a death mask (it was morbid and we all love morbid), the artist's Palette, his Palette Knife and his glasses. These things bring an exhibition to life for me and my favourite things are always the diaries/correspondance between the artist and his friends/colleagues and whatever else. It must been an artiste thing to collect years worth of letters that the rest of us might consider clutter because it seems as if most exhibitions will feature letters of this kind. They are my favourite because you gather an understanding of an artists personality, in a genuine kind of way that is impossible to gather from their work. Because their work is always mindful of what it portrays. Their handwriting too, I have a thing for handwriting. It's great. 

The first room is called Turner After 60, Life, Work, Legacy. Turner turned 60 in the 1830's. During this period of his life he was potentially the most unpopular that he had ever been and would ever be. What he had hinted at 20 years (ish?) earlier with Rain, Steam and Speed (see here) had fully materialised with abstract forms and a subtle mastery of colour that he had spent decades conjouring up. I dragged my brother along with me (in exchange for supper out afterwards) and he did not like this room. He said quite simply that it didn't look as if Turner could paint. I protested, banging on about how special it is that artists were gaining this freedom to paint in this way, while insisting he was a very talented draughtsman that had CHOSEN to depict reality this way. Perhaps the Tate could have made the fact that this was a choice more obvious to their audience, so not to exclude people with no background knowledge in art? Or at the very least change the layout. I am all for chronology and starting with what was neither the end or beginning of the period being exhibited seemed a bit illogical to me.

The second room is called 'On the Wing' Travel and Tours 1835-45. This room, I suppose, was meant to complement the first one. This room focuses on Turner's travelling after he had turned 60 and featured lots of his sketch book works as he sketched along the way.  Throughout this period he visited the environmentally hostile, mountainous region of Val d'Aosta in Italy; whilst also visiting France, Luxembourg, Germany, Venice, Austria and Switzerland. He was old and frail but nevertheless went around documenting Europe and his work from this time is equally as weathered (visually not literally). The theme of this room gave these works a sense of importance in a way that the first one did not. In what was perhaps a rush to see the world in his old age his work gives off a sense of his repeated attempts to portray the scenes at his feet in a way that would satisfy him. Typically though, the vast number of sketches he produced and his erractic need to go off wandering suggested to me that he was not satisfied. Old artists are always sad, and as a romantic Turner was certainly not exempt from this. 

The third room is called Past and Present. This room shows for the first time how Turner was not solely concerned with the illustration of landscape. Here lay his pieces that concern themselves with history, mythology and engaging with the present day and feature paintings from throughout his career. The centre piece here, for me at least, was of course Rain, Steam and Speed which has always been my favourite. However this is a painting that is usually on display to see free at the National Gallery - so that's a bit cheeky. But then again, what is a Turner exhibition without this painting? The rest seemed to have been dusted off and removed from their own archive that is mostly made up from the Turner Bequest of 1856. I wouldn't have a clue how much it would cost to keep these delicate things safe and preserved. If I was to hazard a guess, I'd say a lot. So I'll let them off!

The fourth room was called Squaring the Circle: New Formats from 1840. As the title of the room suggests, this space featured an innovation from Turner: A complete transformation of the canvas. Not only in the shape of the canvases themselves, but how multiple scenes could be arranged together to portray something in a more powerful manner, making use of the different planes, instead of treating the canvas as one, linear, narrative. That is to say, the foreground may not be a visual representation of what was actually in the foreground of the vision; instead, the consciousness of the figure, or a different time. This reminded me a lot of the thought behind Michelangelo's Doni Tondo (see here). 

The fifth room was called That Real Sea Feeling. Turner eventually owned a boat, in Kent. This is really no surprise when you enter this room. Although evidence of his fascination with the sea is evident before you enter this room - the extent at which this was the case is made obvious here. He apparently spent a lot of time down south to contemplate the sea as he approached the end of his life. He was interested in the depth of the sea, the complexity of depicting it in a truthful way, the dangers at sea, the omnipotence of the sea over land and those that dared to cross it; oddly too, he was interested in whales. A whole side of the wall was almost covered in depictions of whales! An American Sea Captain, Elisha Ely Morgan, remarked that through all of the romantic 'fog and mystery' there was a good old 'real sea feeling' in him and his work. While he could have been an old romantic searching for the meaning and life and all that, he could have equally of been just an old man enjoying his older years by the sea, loving the sea life.

The sixth room was called Last Works. Finally - some chronology. These works were created in the late 40s and early 50s before his death in 1851. This room has an air of uncertainty about it because a lot of the works here have approximated dates and titles. It is believed his production declined after 1845 and many of the oil paintings displayed in this room are incomplete. His health could have dictated his preference for watercolours during this time given that they were easier to do.

All in all, I enjoyed the exhibition. Particularly how it questions the romantic notion we attach to Turner: was he actually the sad old romantic we assume him to have been? Or was he just a bit ill? Did he just really love the sea, as opposed to being attracted to it because of the romantic idea of the sublime? I also loved being able to see lots and lots of Turners. I have only ever really been able to see the handful that the National Gallery display in their permanent collection, so this was an experience I consider to be worth the money. Having said that, I wish the layout and themes were punchier and that they had a larger exhibition space for this - because it was busy! But this is why art is great. We all experience it differently. 

P.S shout out to all the passive aggressive tutters out there! Briefly walking past a painting because there were hundreds of people packed into a tiny space is not a crime. I dislike that entitlement is a trait among some gallery goers who clearly resent art becoming part of our wider culture. Art will become more popular, these places will be busier, and the sacred 2 metre gap you need between yourself and the painting to comfortably fit your colossal ego may be walked through!

P.P.S I need to watch the film Turner asap.

Some pretty paintings shown in the exhibition:

Fishermen on the Lagoon, Moonlight, 1840, Tate.


Regulus, 1828, Tate.

War. The Exile and the Rock Limpet, 1842, Tate.

The Blue Rigi, Sunrise, 1842, Tate.

A Harpooned Whale, 1845, Tate.

Venice: The Interior of a Wine Shop, 1833-35, Tate.

The Departure of the Fleet, 1850, Tate.

Ancient Rome; Agrippina Landing with the Ashes of Germanicus, 1839, Tate.



Thursday, 19 December 2013

Paul Klee Exhibition at Tate Modern

The Paul Klee exhibition is running up until March 2014 at the Tate Modern.
I got the chance to go for free through my university but usually the prices are about £15 for an adult and only slightly less for concessions. My advice is to ask for the 2 for 1 booklet from any train station in or around the London area - you can then get 2 for 1 which makes it a bit more reasonable.

The exhibition consists of 17 rooms which in my eyes is brilliant value for money if you are to consider that for the same(ish) price at Tate Britain their current exhibition only has about 7 rooms. There is a lot of content and if you are a fan of Paul Klee i'm fairly sure all of the pieces you may want to see will be there!



Paul Klee was a big name in 20th century art because although in his work there is obvious influence from the Cubists, the Constructivists, the German Expressionists and Abstractionists etc, he drew on their influence and put his own twist on it. What came from that? a 'very personal use of line', according to the Curator Matthew Gale.

The exhibition is laid out chronologically and each of the 17 rooms while being arranged chronologically have also been grouped under a common theme be it composition, colour, an event, etc.. Each room also has an explanation written on the wall in a clear, large typeface to give you a concise idea of the particular works that came from that period. The pamphlet that they give you on your way in is also ordered in a chronological manner instead of room by room. The placards that accompany the paintings do not on every ocassion have information on the particular work that it may refer to. However, it is clear to see that where appropriate, and where an image may have more significance than the others, the placard offers an insight into the image.

The first room offers a timeline to the viewer, and covers from his birth to his death and everything in between. The middle of the room if I remember correctly has a small display of his diary.

Klee was born in 1879. As a child he studied music and thus he began his career as a musician. It wasn't until he was 19 that he moves to Germany to study painting. After an affair and a deceased young child he spent a while in Italy and there felt 'humiliated' by the works of the past. Therefore, when he returns to Bern he takes on a course in anatomical drawing. He married Lily Stumpf in 1906 and by 1907 he has his first child with her. Over the next 5 years he takes part in some of his first exhibitions, including one with the 'Blue Rider' group. Among his new Blue Rider friends were Kandinsky, Macke and Marc. After the outbreak of WW1 his friends disbanded as they were now enemies of the German State, One of these, Macke, was actually killed in war.

His art begins to respond to the war and thus was the increase in abstract forms in an effort to escape the war torn reality. He himself was meant to join the army but a new policy was set that said artists were to receive preferential treatment because so many of them had already died at war.

By 1920 he was considered a significant artist and had his first large scale solo exhibition before joining the Bauhaus School in 1921 as a teacher.

A year later a Russian art exhibition is held in Berlin and signposted the first monumental shift from German Expressionism to geometrical and abstract art. Klee was clearly influenced by this too. However, just as this art surfaced a horrific case of hyper-inflation and a national sense of anti-communism surfaced. An art collector called Scheyer formulated the idea that Klee and 3 other artists should form a group called the 'Blue Four' that would jointly exhibit work in the US. Because of economic troubles the cheeky bastard also had the 'Klee society' established for him, whereby people would pay him a regular income! with the promise that they can buy his works at a special rate.

Klee was a lot like Picasso in that he dabbled in a lot of different styles and throughout the first half of the 1920's he used automatism (drawing without thinking about it or looking at it - it supposedly exposes your subconscious thoughts) and was involved in a Surrealist exhibition in Paris... and not forgetting his cubist and suprematist inspired works.

He turned 50 in 1929 and had part in the 1930 exhibition by Barr at MoMA. In 1932 he saw Picasso's collection of works for the first time having 'resisted' them for quite some time. After this, his works got a bit bigger in size as if to compete with Picasso. By 1933 Hitler had raided Klee's house seeing as he was a so called 'degenerate' modern artist. Klee then emigrated to Switzerland. His new life was not as swish as his life before and conditions were cramped. In 1934 his first exhibition in England was held and in 1935 Klee made another exhibition in Bern. This was a response to the fact that he was living off of his savings and needed some dollar. Everything that he exhibited was focused on his life in Switzerland and it seemed as if his German past was being put aside.

However, during this time in his life painting became increasingly difficult. He was suffering from a fatal disease, Scleroderma. By 1936 he could only manage to paint 25 paintings as opposed to the 200-500 he was making earlier on in his life. His body was literally seizing up and he soon became unable to swallow.

By 1937 Hitler became comfortable in his position and made a further crack down on the so called degenerate art. He took 16000 pieces of art in total and either sold them off or destroyed them (or in some cases people stole them themselves to either protect or make money on them!). In total there were 150 by Klee that were taken. Hopefully they show up in the recent bundle of art that they found in that random flat! In 1939 Klee had lived in Switzerland long enough to get his citizenship. Unfortunately, he only got to enjoy it for a year because he died in 1940.

That was my attempt at a concise(ish) summary of the history that is used to contextualise the exhibition. I used the 'EY Exhibition, Paul Klee: Making Visible, Tate Modern, 2013' pamphlet to gather my info. But of course, if you want to experience the real thing you'll have to go see it!

It was probably one of the more enjoyable exhibitions I have been to, and the fact that Gale made it so historically rich is definitely something other curators could take note of. There was a lot on display which of course can overload you with information but on the other hand is what you'd want if you're paying £15!

Here are some images that were on display:
The Hotel, 1913


Flowerbed, 1913

Landscape with Flags, 1915



Rememberance Sheet of a Conception, 1918



With the Rainbow, 1917




Redgreen and Violet-Yellow Rhythms, 1920




They're Biting, 1920



Aquarium, 1921



Comedy, 1921



A Yound Lady's Adventure, 1922




Architecture, 1923




Fish Magic, 1925





Ships in the Dark, 1927




In the Current Six Thresholds, 1929




Dispute, 1929




Before the Snow, 1929




Toys, 1931




The Man of the Future, 1933





Forest Witches, 1938





Rich Harbour, 1938