Lora Hristova: Self-Portrait (Money Shot) |
There seems to be a lot of assertive female sexuality around at the
moment: see Dorothy Iannone and Celia Hampton below, plus there's still
just time to catch Lora Hristova's deconstructions of
pornographic texts at the Zabludowitz Collection (to 7 April - failing
that, look at her splendidly organised research site at www.oral-malkin.tumblr.com ). She says of the above that she's 'referencing the pose at the
climax of most pornographic films, in which the woman's face is
presented to be ejaculated on. I like the theory that it's the visual
representation of the invisible female orgasm, or rather a substitute
for it, which offers undeniable evidence of enjoyment'.. and yet 'the facial expression is much more aggressive and confrontational than most porn, which undermines any alluring aspects'. But let's begin
with what may be the ultimate blast of colour, followed by people as letters...
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Peter Halley: Paintings
2012-2013 at Waddington Custot, 11 Cork St - Central
11 Apr — 3 May (talk 11 May): www.waddingtoncustot.com
Bang Goes the Theory |
25 years ago New York artist Peter Halley (rhymes with ‘valley’)
decided
‘that space we live in is defined by compartments connected by
predetermined pathways’. He hit
on a way to represent that: a combination of cool geometry and hot paint which
politicised the minimalist square by making it stand for the prison cell to
produce what Halley again thinks of ‘as a
conversation between being connected and not being connected’. Those meanings remain
relevant, but I suspect they’ve been in play so long that people judge the
paintings mainly as abstracts which burn off the wall with Day-Glo light and Roll-a-Tex
surfaces. These new ones, titled from TV show phrases which are differently infected
by the paintings, look strong either way. All in two separate peice, incidentally... but why?
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Karina Bisch: La Moderne @ Hilary Crisp, 33 White Church Lane – Whitechapel
French artist Karina Bisch, who conjoins fashion, dance and
20th century art history, condenses plenty into this small show. Centre stage
is a 3 x Bisch-sized dress made up of canvases riffing on such as Matisse and Delaunay.
On the wall, with matching illogicality, is a silk scarf which would suit a much
bigger giant. On it, dancers make up the letters of ‘La Moderne’ through their
poses, set against batik-like swirls of dropped ink. The spirit is caught in a
collaborative interview with fashion artist Julie Verhoeven, in which Bisch’s
answers have been spliced to make some kind of poetry: to balance exuberance, warmth and mayonnaise, I put it on my hair…
To 10 May: www.richardsaltoun.com
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Double Dutch: Bas Jan Ader, Stanley Brouwn and Ger van Elk @ Richard Saltoun, 111 Great Titchfield Street - FitzroviaTo 10 May: www.richardsaltoun.com
Ger van Elk: detail from The Co-Founder of the Word O.K. - Hollywood, 1971 |
Richard Saltoun has taken over the ground floor of the former David Roberts space, and this agreeably contradictorily-titled show provides a chance to sample the sly wit of three renowned Dutch conceptualists' 60's - 80's work. It's all worth a look, but here van Elk poses with a framed letter in Hollywood to indicate that he - or maybe his work – is okay (odd how that's good for a person, but faint praise for an artwork). Apparently 'one source for the word OK comes from the nickname of US President Martin van Buren, known as Old Kinderhook. Van Buren, like Van Elk, a Dutchman living in the USA, adopted the political slogan Vote for O.K. for the 1840 presidential election. He lost the election'.
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Barocci: Brilliance and Grace @ The National Gallery
To 19 May: www.nationalgallery.org.uk
Head study for St John the Evangelist |
Critics have been raving about just how good
is the little-known 16th century Urbino painter Federico Barocci (say
'Barotchi') and they're right: he's a draughtsman of genius, a dynamic
and innovative iconographer of the Christian set pieces and a brilliant
colourist (particularly in blending facial highlights with such
combinations as cream, pink and grey glazes). He left 1,500 preparatory
works, enabling this show to present how drawings and oil sketches feed
into the final painting in the most persuasive manner I've ever seen.
Just go!
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Dorothy Iannone: Innocent and Aware & Serena Korda:
Aping the Beast @ Camden Arts Centre - Finchley Rd
Dorothy Iannone: The Next Great Moment in History is Ours, 1970 |
This neat match-up between Teuto-American DoROTHy Iannone’s
hippyish 60s-originating assertive search for love and London newcomer Serena
Korda’s edge-of-spoof animal interactions might be taken to show that if art
was the new religion, film is the new paganism. Iannone’s urgently desirous video installations and acrylic drawings of couples with disembodied genitals pop up often enough, but this is her first British solo show. Over forty years she's proselytised, too endearingly to shock, for us all to search out the sort of erotic intensity she found with her muse,
Dieter Roth… whose diaries, incidentally, will be shown at Camden in May.
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Celia Hempton: Cur @ Southard Reid, 7 Royalty Mews - Soho To 27 April: www.southardreid.com
Bear |
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Stefana McClure: science is FICTION @ Bartha Contemporary, 25 Margaret Street – FitzroviaTo 11 May: www.barthacontemporary.com
Hinotori 1-9: dialogue to manga by Osamu Tezuka |
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Nathaniel Rackowe: Reflections on Space @ Bischoff/Weiss,
14a Hay Hill – Mayfair
To 4 May: www.bischoffweiss.com
GP5 |
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Jeremy Cooper et al: Postcard Narratives @ ROOM, 30 Manchester Street - near Baker St
4-27 April: www.roomartspace.co.uk
Leavers
In this unusual exhibition, Jeremy Cooper - insider track author of a book on YBA's at 50 - presents a cornucopia relating to his other recent book on artists' postcards. Here, for example, is his presentation of 169 'leavers' from Harrow School where his father taught. They are photographs given to friends or to those who taught the boy: these are given to Cooper himself or his father. That's just one corner of the show which also incorporates several artists, including Frances Richardson, Tracey Emin, Georgie Hopton and Julie Cockburn, invited to make artistic use of Cooper's huge collection. Possibly Daniel Eatock's pseudo-LeWittian deconstruction of the lines on a plain postcard is the highlight...
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David Nash at Kew Gardens
To 14 April: www.kew.org/visit-kew-gardens/whats-on/david-nash
|
Murmur (video still) |
I would have featured Kirk Palmer's triptych of landscape meditations on the nuclear bombing of Japan (Murmur, 2006; Hiroshima, 2007; War's End: An Island of Remembrance, 2012 - to 13 April) at Paradise Row, but have nothing to add to the following in the excellent Photomonitor:
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