London has a huge amount to offer to the Art enthusiast. The freedom to pass through gallery to gallery free of charge is enormously beneficial.
Having been to New York recently, I now know that you have to pay to get into the larger national museums. A customary $25 no less! A huge chunk of my holiday budget was immediately swallowed as I HAD to go to Moma, the Met and the Guggenheim.
London galleries on the whole only charge for entry to exhibitions. I hadn't appreciated the value and accessibility of the constant collections until now. Since coming back I have a huge desire to visit the National Gallery.
Next Thursday, I will be visiting the National Gallery to see the Titian Metamorphosis show. For anyone wishing to learn more, the exhibition is free and will remain at the NG until the 23rd of September.
http://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/whats-on/exhibitions/metamorphosis-titian-2012
Exquisite Corpse
Wednesday, 22 August 2012
Wednesday, 6 June 2012
Back To The Start
Having started this blog nearly two years ago, I am now ready to continue it.
Artists and Exhibitions to follow.
Including and especially Weegee
Sunday, 7 November 2010
The Modern Manet
Edouard Manet - Le Fifre
Brilliant as this picture is to modern eyes it is not so startling as it appeared to Manet's contemporaries, accustomed to the masking of colour by the veil of heavy chiaroscuro. A concealed element in the design is the influence of the Japanese print which was so marked on French painting in general in the second half of the nineteenth century. It is to be traced here in the almost flat areas of colour against a plain background. Colour seems on the point of escaping from a subservient descriptive role into the dominant factor it was later to become.
Except among the few, this picture shared the unpopularity that previous works by Manet had suffered and was refused at the Salon of 1866. The refusal brought Emile Zola to the artist's defense in L'Evènement but Zola's assertion that he was `so convinced that M. Manet would be one of the masters of tomorrow that he would think it a good stroke of business, if he had money enough, to buy all its canvases now' infuriated the readers, and their anger caused the editor to dispense with Zola's services as critic. The novelist returned to the attack elsewhere with a longer eulogy. His description of the fifer as `le petit bonhomme' who `puffs away with all his heart and soul' was a literary approach but his polemics served to keep the issue of aesthetic freedom a living force for the younger generation.
Edouard Manet - Argenteuil
Edouard Manet - The Balcony
Loosely based on Goya's Majas on the Balcony, this painting was shown at the Salon of 1869. The figures are Berthe Morisot (seated); Antoine Guillemet, landscape painter; Fanny Claus, a young violinist; and, barely visible in the background, his son Leon Leenhoff.
The Woman In White
Leonard Rosoman RA
Leonard Rosoman studied at King Edward VII School of Art, University of Durham from 1930 to 1935, the Royal Academy Schools from 1935 to 1936 and the Central School of Arts and Crafts from 1936 to 1937. He was appointed Official War Artist to the Admiralty in 1943.
Rosoman taught at Camberwell School of Art from 1946 to 1948, Edinburgh College of Art from 1948 to 1956, the Royal College and Chelsea School of Art, London. He was chief designer of the Diaghilev Exhibition in London and Edinburgh in 1954. He was elected to the Royal Academy in 1960 and became a Senior Academician in 1989.
As well as exhibiting extensively in London and New York, Leonard Rosoman has also painted many murals including one for the Royal Academy of Arts restaurant (1986) and Lambeth Palace chapel ceiling (1988). His work is represented in many collections including the National Portrait Gallery, the British Museum and the Imperial War Museum, London where a retrospective of his work was held in 1989. Edinburgh College of Art made Rosoman an Honorary Fellow in 2005.
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