Foam Fotografiemuseum Amsterdam || Exhibition: Swinging Sixties London – Photography in the Capital of Cool || until 02.09.2015

This summer, Foam presents Swinging Sixties London – Photography in the Capital of Cool. The thematic group show immerses visitors in the dazzling London of the sixties, an era bursting with possibilities.

The presentation touches upon all of the remarkable developments in and around photography at the time: fashion, celebrities, music, magazines, design and social change. In the exhibition, Foam brings together the work of iconic photographers of the sixties – who in their heyday were often as famous as the stars in front of their cameras. Featuring work by Terence Donovan, Brian Duffy, John French, Norman Parkinson, James Barnor, John Hopkins, John Cowan, Eric Swayne and Philip Townsend.

International Epicentre

In the mid-1960s, the capital of England stood for everything hip, fashionable and cool. In April 1966, America’s Time Magazine even dedicated a complete issue to London: ‘the Swinging City’. “Ancient elegance and new opulence are all tangled up in a dazzling blur of op and pop,” writes Piri Halasz in the legendary cover story. This period in London’s history represents the transformation the capital underwent in the decennia after the war, from a grim, shattered city to an international and lively epicentre for style, culture and fashion.

Decade of Growth

The Swinging Sixties marked the birth of the superstar, the fan and the individual, but also saw an economic growth which resulted in extensive democratization. From now on, fashion and leisure were available for many more people. attitudes among the younger generation changed, too. In the sixties, the free-spirited baby boomers rebelled against the conservative post-war culture of their parents. These were the golden days for music, design, fashion and style, and it was in London where models became superstars. Pop stars grew even bigger, with bands like The Kinks, The Rolling Stones and The Beatles defining the sound of the sixties.

Groundbreaking Images

photographers Terence Donovan and Brian Duffy, well known for their catchy portraits of models, musicians and actors, shape our image of the Swinging Sixties. The photographers are as widely known as the stars and socialites they shot, and perhaps just as infamous as well. These were self-made boys from the poor East End of London. Donovan excels with his fashion photography, narrating series and moving portraits of female and male models. Duffy shot iconic photographs of famous models and personalities like Grace Coddington, Jane Birkin, Mick Jagger and Michael Caine.

With their groundbreaking style and technique, they rebelled against the day’s leading photographers, John French and Norman Parkinson, who themselves were important for British fashion photography in their own right, and had proven to be influential pioneers in the preceding decennia. Also Eric Swayne, whose archive was recently rediscovered, is featured in the exhibition. Swayne was in close contact with rock stars and top models, which is how he managed to shoot his intimate portraits. John Cowan made the optimism of his generation visible by literally letting his models kiss the sky. James Barnor’s photographs, featuring British-African models, demonstrate the social changes of the time.

Youth culture and social change will be magnificently addressed through the work of lauded protest leader and photographer John ‘Hoppy’ Hopkins, accompanied by the moving and often cheerful shots by society photographer Philip Townsend. These are enriched with examples from music, film, magazines, fashion and design. The presentation breathes the Capital of Cool in many ways, and offers a comprehensive experience of swinging London in the sixties.

With special thanks to James Barnor and Philip Townsend, Addie Vassie Gallery, Autograph ABP, Elegantly Papered, Alex Anthony, Carolyn Cowan, Diana Donovan, Chris Duffy, Sandie Goodman, David Hillman, Flip Jelly, Emily Mahoney, Tony Merrett, Elizabeth Smith, Joanna Stephenson, Pauline Stroosnijder, Tom Swayne, James Ware, all archives and estates.

Foam is sponsored by the BankGiro Loterij, De Brauw Blackstone Westbroek, Delta Lloyd, Gemeente AmsterdamOlympus and the VandenEnde Foundation.

Celia Hammond 1961

Celia Hammond 1961

Celia , Picture: Terence Donovan

Celia , Picture: Terence Donovan

Grace Coddington, 1966 Picture: Eric Swayne

Grace Coddington, 1966
Picture: Eric Swayne

Jane Birkin, 1965 Picture: Eric Swayne

Jane Birkin, 1965
Picture: Eric Swayne

Flying high, 1966 (Jill Kennington) Picture: John Cowan

Flying high, 1966 (Jill Kennington)
Picture: John Cowan

Jerry Hall and Antonio Lopez, May 1975 Picture: Norman Parkinson

Jerry Hall and Antonio Lopez, May 1975
Picture: Norman Parkinson

Keith Richards, 1964 Picture: Eric Swayne

Keith Richards, 1964
Picture: Eric Swayne

Melanie Hampshire and Jill Kennington, 1963 Picture: Norman Parkinson

Melanie Hampshire and Jill Kennington, 1963
Picture: Norman Parkinson

Mick Jagger, 1964 Picture: Eric Swayne

Mick Jagger, 1964
Picture: Eric Swayne

French Elle – Tweed Suit Picture: Duffy © Duffy Archive

French Elle – Tweed Suit
Picture: Duffy © Duffy Archive

French Elle - London Police Box Picture: Duffy © Duffy Archive

French Elle – London Police Box
Picture: Duffy © Duffy Archive

The Blue Wave, shot for French Elle, May 1966 Picture: Duffy © Duffy Archive

The Blue Wave, shot for French Elle, May 1966
Picture: Duffy © Duffy Archive

Michael Caine, 1964 Picture: Duffy © Duffy Archive

Michael Caine, 1964
Picture: Duffy © Duffy Archive

Jean Shrimpton Picture: Duffy © Duffy Archive

Jean Shrimpton
Picture: Duffy © Duffy Archive

Pauline Stone with Apple, for Town Magazine, 1962 Picture: Duffy © Duffy Archive

Pauline Stone with Apple, for Town Magazine, 1962
Picture: Duffy © Duffy Archive

Thermodynamic, 1960 Picture: Terence Donovan

Thermodynamic, 1960
Picture: Terence Donovan

Traffic, 1960 Picture: Norman Parkinson Ltd

Traffic, 1960
Picture: Norman Parkinson Ltd

Twiggy, 1966 Picture: Terence Donovan

Twiggy, 1966
Picture: Terence Donovan

Source: Foam Fotografiemuseum Amsterdam

 

ModeMuseum Provincie Antwerpen – MoMu || Exhibition: Dries Van Noten. Inspirations || until 19.07.2015

For the very first time in his career designer Dries Van Noten discloses his oeuvre in an exhibition. No classical retrospective, but an intimate journey into his artistic universe, revealing the singularity of his creative process, which he illustrates with his numerous sources of inspiration.

The exhibition brings together various artistic fields through an assemblage of historical, pictorial, ethnic, cinematic and geographic references. While stressing the influences, the analogies and the contradictions in Dries Van Noten’s work, the exhibition combines fashion design with the world of decorative and fine arts in order to illustrate the Belgian creator’s distinctive techniques and stylistic vocabulary.

Including works by a.o Yves Klein, Thierry De Cordier, Victor Vasarely, Damien Hirst, Cecily Brown, Pol Bury, Christopher Wool, Hubert Duprat, Pablo Picasso, Mark Rothko and James Tissot.

Exhibition initiated and realised by Les Arts Décoratifs, Paris (01/03-02/11/14); organised in Antwerp by MoMu – Fashion Museum Province of Antwerp

ModeMuseum Provincie Antwerpen – MoMu || Exhibition: Dries Van Noten. Inspirations || until 19.07.2015

ModeMuseum Provincie Antwerpen – MoMu || Exhibition: Dries Van Noten. Inspirations || until 19.07.2015

ModeMuseum Provincie Antwerpen – MoMu || Exhibition: Dries Van Noten. Inspirations || until 19.07.2015

ModeMuseum Provincie Antwerpen – MoMu || Exhibition: Dries Van Noten. Inspirations || until 19.07.2015

ModeMuseum Provincie Antwerpen – MoMu || Exhibition: Dries Van Noten. Inspirations || until 19.07.2015

ModeMuseum Provincie Antwerpen – MoMu || Exhibition: Dries Van Noten. Inspirations || until 19.07.2015

ModeMuseum Provincie Antwerpen – MoMu || Exhibition: Dries Van Noten. Inspirations || until 19.07.2015

ModeMuseum Provincie Antwerpen – MoMu || Exhibition: Dries Van Noten. Inspirations || until 19.07.2015

ModeMuseum Provincie Antwerpen – MoMu || Exhibition: Dries Van Noten. Inspirations || until 19.07.2015

ModeMuseum Provincie Antwerpen – MoMu || Exhibition: Dries Van Noten. Inspirations || until 19.07.2015

ModeMuseum Provincie Antwerpen – MoMu || Exhibition: Dries Van Noten. Inspirations || until 19.07.2015

ModeMuseum Provincie Antwerpen – MoMu || Exhibition: Dries Van Noten. Inspirations || until 19.07.2015

Source: ModeMuseum Provincie Antwerpen – MoMu

British Museum || Exhibition: Indigenous Australia: enduring civilisation || until 02.08.2015

Discover the remarkable story of one of the world’s oldest continuing cultures in this major exhibition.

The show is be the first major exhibition in the UK to present a history of Indigenous Australia through objects, celebrating the cultural strength and resilience of both Aboriginal peoples and Torres Strait Islanders. This culture has continued for over 60,000 years in diverse environments which range from lush rainforest and arid landscapes to inland rivers, islands, seas and urban areas today. Hundreds of different Indigenous groups live across this vast continent, each with their own defined areas, languages and traditions.

Indigenous Australians developed sustainable ways of living from the land and sea using objects of great beauty and efficiency. From the deadly precision of a boomerang to bags and baskets for carrying water and food – essential for survival – these objects require supreme skill to design and make. In the exhibition, examples of practical objects such as spear-throwers (the ‘Swiss Army knife of the desert’) sit alongside magnificent works of art, such as Uta Uta Tjangala’s Yumari (1981) – a masterpiece now featured on the Australian passport. The oldest continuing art tradition in the world, Aboriginal art tells stories of the great ancestral beings who created the land and the people, and gave the law and lessons for living which still continue today. In contrast, the objects from the Torres Strait Islands reflect the centrality of the sea and its creatures to the Islanders’ beliefs and way of life, including spectacular turtle-shell masks used in ceremonies before the arrival of Christian missionaries. Together, the objects in the exhibition give an overview of Indigenous Australian culture throughout the continent, both remote and urban.

The exhibition features objects drawn from the British Museum’s unparalleled collection. Many of them were collected in the early colonial period (1770–1850), and have never been on public display before. There are important loans from Australian museums and specially commissioned artworks. Many Indigenous Australians have generously contributed to the exhibition, providing information, advice and permissions.

These objects represent the cultural continuity and resilience of these cultures since a British colony was established in Australia in 1788. The exhibition allows you to explore the complex relationships Indigenous Australians have with the natural world and how they have responded to changing historical circumstances. It is a remarkable story of how an ancient civilisation has endured and whose story is still unfolding today.

Mask of turtle shell. Mer, Torres Strait, before 1855.

Mask of turtle shell. Mer, Torres Strait, before 1855.

 Kunmanara Hogan, Tjaruwa Woods, Yarangka Thomas, Estelle Hogan, Ngalpingka Simms and Myrtle Pennington, Kungkarangkalpa (detail). Acrylic on canvas, 2013. © the artists, courtesy Spinifex Arts Project.

Kunmanara Hogan, Tjaruwa Woods, Yarangka Thomas, Estelle Hogan, Ngalpingka Simms and Myrtle Pennington, Kungkarangkalpa (detail). Acrylic on canvas, 2013. © the artists, courtesy Spinifex Arts Project.

Source: British Museum

Happy Birthday David Hockney!

English painter, printmaker, photographer and stage designer. Perhaps the most popular and versatile British artist of the 20th century, Hockney made apparent his facility as a draughtsman while studying at Bradford School of Art between 1953 and 1957.

Hockney soon sought ways of reintegrating a personal subject-matter into his art. He began tentatively by copying fragments of poems on to his paintings, encouraging a close scrutiny of the surface and creating a specific identity for the painted marks through the alliance of word and image. These cryptic messages soon gave way to open declarations in a series of paintings produced in 1960–61 on the theme of homosexual love.

Hockney’s subsequent development was a continuation of his student work, although a significant change in his approach occurred after his move to California at the end of 1963. It is clear that when he moved to that city it was, at least in part, in search of the fantasy that he had formed of a sensual and uninhibited life of athletic young men, swimming pools, palm trees and perpetual sunshine.

On his arrival in California, Hockney changed from oil to acrylic paints, applying them as a smooth surface of flat and brilliant colour that helped to emphasise the pre-eminence of the image. By the end of the decade Hockney’s anxieties about appearing modern had abated to the extent that he was able to pare away the devices and to allow his naturalistic rendering of the world to speak for itself.

Source: Tate

Here follows some art from his “Illustrations for Fourteen Poems from C.P. Cavafy”.

Two Boys Aged 23 or 24 1966 David Hockney born 1937, David Hockney

Two Boys Aged 23 or 24 1966 David Hockney born 1937 Purchased 1992 http://www.tate.org.uk/art/work/P77564

In an Old Book 1966 by David Hockney born 1937

In an Old Book 1966 David Hockney born 1937 Purchased 1992 http://www.tate.org.uk/art/work/P77568

In the Dull Village 1966 by David Hockney born 1937

In the Dull Village 1966 David Hockney born 1937 Purchased 1992 http://www.tate.org.uk/art/work/P77570

The Beginning 1966 by David Hockney born 1937

The Beginning 1966 David Hockney born 1937 Purchased 1992 http://www.tate.org.uk/art/work/P77571

One Night 1966 by David Hockney born 1937

One Night 1966 David Hockney born 1937 Purchased 1992 http://www.tate.org.uk/art/work/P77572

Portrait of Cavafy II 1966 by David Hockney born 1937

Portrait of Cavafy II 1966 David Hockney born 1937 Purchased 1992 http://www.tate.org.uk/art/work/P77575

mumok Wien || Exhibition: John Skoog. VÄRN || until 27.09.2015

In his photography, films, and videos, John Skoog (born 1985 in Kvidinge, Sweden, lives in Frankfurt am Main) combines research into history and everyday life with a poetic and fictional atmosphere that is grounded in the film and literary traditions of Scandinavian modernism. At Art Basel he received the Baloise Art Prize, with prize money of 30,000 Swiss francs, for his 2014 video Reduit (Redoubt). This work is the centerpiece of his new solo exhibition in Vienna, entitled RN (Defense) and showing three of his film works for the first time in Austria. The artist presents Reduit (Redoubt) embedded within an installation on the museum’s Level –2. At the same time mumok kino is screening the films Sent på Jorden (Late on Earth, 2011) and Förår (Early Spring, 2012). Together these three works form a trilogy that is not merely set in rural surroundings but also addresses the economic exploitation of the natural world. The artist also draws a picture of social realities that dispenses with any notions of rural innocence and security.

Ausstellungsansicht / Exhibition view John Skoog. VÄRN. Baloise Kunst-Preis 2014 / Baloise Art Prize 2014 mumok, Wien, 26.6.–27.9.2015 Photo: mumok / Laurent Ziegler

Ausstellungsansicht / Exhibition view
John Skoog. VÄRN. Baloise Kunst-Preis 2014 / Baloise Art Prize 2014
mumok, Wien, 26.6.–27.9.2015
Photo: mumok / Laurent Ziegler

Ausstellungsansicht / Exhibition view John Skoog. VÄRN. Baloise Kunst-Preis 2014 / Baloise Art Prize 2014 mumok, Wien, 26.6.–27.9.2015 Photo: mumok / Laurent Ziegler

Ausstellungsansicht / Exhibition view
John Skoog. VÄRN. Baloise Kunst-Preis 2014 / Baloise Art Prize 2014
mumok, Wien, 26.6.–27.9.2015
Photo: mumok / Laurent Ziegler

Ausstellungsansicht / Exhibition view John Skoog. VÄRN. Baloise Kunst-Preis 2014 / Baloise Art Prize 2014 mumok, Wien, 26.6.–27.9.2015 Photo: mumok / Laurent Ziegler

Ausstellungsansicht / Exhibition view
John Skoog. VÄRN. Baloise Kunst-Preis 2014 / Baloise Art Prize 2014
mumok, Wien, 26.6.–27.9.2015
Photo: mumok / Laurent Ziegler

Ausstellungsansicht / Exhibition view John Skoog. VÄRN. Baloise Kunst-Preis 2014 / Baloise Art Prize 2014 mumok, Wien, 26.6.–27.9.2015 Photo: mumok / Laurent Ziegler

Ausstellungsansicht / Exhibition view
John Skoog. VÄRN. Baloise Kunst-Preis 2014 / Baloise Art Prize 2014
mumok, Wien, 26.6.–27.9.2015
Photo: mumok / Laurent Ziegler

Ausstellungsansicht / Exhibition view John Skoog. VÄRN. Baloise Kunst-Preis 2014 / Baloise Art Prize 2014 mumok, Wien, 26.6.–27.9.2015 Photo: mumok / Laurent Ziegler

Ausstellungsansicht / Exhibition view
John Skoog. VÄRN. Baloise Kunst-Preis 2014 / Baloise Art Prize 2014
mumok, Wien, 26.6.–27.9.2015
Photo: mumok / Laurent Ziegler

Ausstellungsansicht / Exhibition view John Skoog. VÄRN. Baloise Kunst-Preis 2014 / Baloise Art Prize 2014 mumok, Wien, 26.6.–27.9.2015 Photo: mumok / Laurent Ziegler

Ausstellungsansicht / Exhibition view
John Skoog. VÄRN. Baloise Kunst-Preis 2014 / Baloise Art Prize 2014
mumok, Wien, 26.6.–27.9.2015
Photo: mumok / Laurent Ziegler

Ausstellungsansicht / Exhibition view John Skoog. VÄRN. Baloise Kunst-Preis 2014 / Baloise Art Prize 2014 mumok, Wien, 26.6.–27.9.2015 Photo: mumok / Laurent Ziegler

Ausstellungsansicht / Exhibition view
John Skoog. VÄRN. Baloise Kunst-Preis 2014 / Baloise Art Prize 2014
mumok, Wien, 26.6.–27.9.2015
Photo: mumok / Laurent Ziegler

Ausstellungsansicht / Exhibition view John Skoog. VÄRN. Baloise Kunst-Preis 2014 / Baloise Art Prize 2014 mumok, Wien, 26.6.–27.9.2015 Photo: mumok / Laurent Ziegler

Ausstellungsansicht / Exhibition view
John Skoog. VÄRN. Baloise Kunst-Preis 2014 / Baloise Art Prize 2014
mumok, Wien, 26.6.–27.9.2015
Photo: mumok / Laurent ZieglerAu

Source: mumok Wien

The Benaki Museum, Athens || Exhibition: ameτρια || until 11.10.2015

ameτρια is the privilege of disproportion, of excess, the rejection of an overall vision, the error that turns out to be right. Out of the meeting of the Benaki Museum and the DESTE Foundation, works and objects become proofs of an impulse that, as a precise and determinate entity, takes part in the evolution of thought.

Totally uninterested in the values of community life, which promotes the virtues of measure and the happy mean, dismeasure is the expression of an original purposeless drive, which chooses neither to have nor not to have and whose sole intention is to be exercised without reserve. The degree of dismeasure is dependent on just how radical is the drive that expresses it.

The exhibition is part of the collaboration between the DESTE Foundation and the Benaki Museum, which aims to promote new and radical developments in contemporary art through a series of solo and group contemporary art exhibitions hosted at the museum.

The exhibition is based on an idea by Roberto Cuoghi.

Curatorial team: Nicoletta De Rosa, Polina Kosmadaki, Alessandro Pasini, Tomaso Piantini, Yorgos Tzirtzilakis

The Benaki Museum, Athens || Exhibition: ameτρια || until 11.10.2015

The Benaki Museum, Athens || Exhibition: ameτρια || until 11.10.2015

The Benaki Museum, Athens || Exhibition: ameτρια || until 11.10.2015

The Benaki Museum, Athens || Exhibition: ameτρια || until 11.10.2015

The Benaki Museum, Athens || Exhibition: ameτρια || until 11.10.2015

The Benaki Museum, Athens || Exhibition: ameτρια || until 11.10.2015

The Benaki Museum, Athens || Exhibition: ameτρια || until 11.10.2015

The Benaki Museum, Athens || Exhibition: ameτρια || until 11.10.2015

The Benaki Museum, Athens || Exhibition: ameτρια || until 11.10.2015

The Benaki Museum, Athens || Exhibition: ameτρια || until 11.10.2015

The Benaki Museum, Athens || Exhibition: ameτρια || until 11.10.2015

The Benaki Museum, Athens || Exhibition: ameτρια || until 11.10.2015

The Benaki Museum, Athens || Exhibition: ameτρια || until 11.10.2015

The Benaki Museum, Athens || Exhibition: ameτρια || until 11.10.2015

The Benaki Museum, Athens || Exhibition: ameτρια || until 11.10.2015

The Benaki Museum, Athens || Exhibition: ameτρια || until 11.10.2015

The Benaki Museum, Athens || Exhibition: ameτρια || until 11.10.2015

The Benaki Museum, Athens || Exhibition: ameτρια || until 11.10.2015

Source: The Benaki Museum (Pireos Street Annexe)

Musée des impressionnismes Giverny || Exhibition: Degas, an Impressionist Painter? || until 19.07.2015

Edgar Degas was one of the leading figures of the Impressionist movement, and yet his relations with other members of the group were complex and he rarely practiced plein-air painting, a characteristic of impressionism.

Instead he preferred more personal subjects, such as dancers’ bodies in movement, and he paid close attention to artificial lighting.

The exhibition brings together 80 works (paintings, pastels, drawings and sculptures) and is divided in five main sections: A classical background, Impressionism in portraiture and scenes of modern life, The question of landscape, The body in movement and Degas after 1892.

Degas as an impressionist, certainly, but above all as an avant-garde artist.

This exhibition received exceptional loans from the Musée d’Orsay
Edgar Degas Ballet, dit aussi L'Étoile, vers 1876 Pastel sur monotype, 58,4 x 42 cm. Paris, musée d'Orsay, inv. FR 12258 © Paris, musée d'Orsay, Dist. RMN-Grand Palais / Photo: Patrice Schmidt

Edgar Degas
Ballet, dit aussi L’Étoile, vers 1876
Pastel sur monotype, 58,4 x 42 cm. Paris, musée d’Orsay, inv. FR 12258
© Paris, musée d’Orsay, Dist. RMN-Grand Palais / Photo: Patrice Schmidt

Edgar Degas Danseuses (Danseuses au repos), vers 1898 Pastel sur cinq feuilles de papier contrecollées sur carton, 83 x 72 cm. Lausanne, fondation de l’Hermitage, legs de Lucie Schmidheiny, 1998 © Lausanne, fondation de l’Hermitage / Photo : Giorgio Skory, Romanel-sur-Lausanne

Edgar Degas
Danseuses (Danseuses au repos), vers 1898
Pastel sur cinq feuilles de papier contrecollées sur carton, 83 x 72 cm. Lausanne, fondation de l’Hermitage, legs de Lucie Schmidheiny, 1998
© Lausanne, fondation de l’Hermitage / Photo : Giorgio Skory, Romanel-sur-Lausanne

Edgar Degas Le Champ de courses, jockeys amateurs près d'une voiture, entre 1876 et 1887 Huile sur toile, 65,2 x 81,2 cm. Paris, musée d’Orsay, RF 1980 © RMN-Grand Palais (musée d'Orsay) / Photo : Hervé Lewandowski

Edgar Degas
Le Champ de courses, jockeys amateurs près d’une voiture, entre 1876 et 1887
Huile sur toile, 65,2 x 81,2 cm. Paris, musée d’Orsay, RF 1980
© RMN-Grand Palais (musée d’Orsay) / Photo : Hervé Lewandowski

Edgar Degas Maisons au bord de la mer, vers 1869 Pastel sur papier chamois, 31,4 x 46,5 cm. Paris, musée d’Orsay, RF 31201 © RMN-Grand Palais (musée d'Orsay) / Photo : Hervé Lewandowski

Edgar Degas
Maisons au bord de la mer, vers 1869
Pastel sur papier chamois, 31,4 x 46,5 cm. Paris, musée d’Orsay, RF 31201
© RMN-Grand Palais (musée d’Orsay) / Photo : Hervé Lewandowski

Edgar Degas Répétition d'un ballet sur la scène, 1874 Huile sur toile, 65 x 81,5 cm. Paris, musée d’Orsay, RF1978 © RMN-Grand Palais (musée d'Orsay) / Hervé Lewandowski

Edgar Degas
Répétition d’un ballet sur la scène, 1874
Huile sur toile, 65 x 81,5 cm. Paris, musée d’Orsay, RF1978
© RMN-Grand Palais (musée d’Orsay) / Hervé Lewandowski

Louisiana Museum of Modern Art || Exhibition: Peter Doig || until 16.08.2015

Doig creates visual spaces, which one gets fascinated by and wants to delve into. The exhibition presents a selection of the artist’s paintings in immersive, large-scale formats where the motifs show people and architecture in nameless and timeless landscapes in glowing colours.

Peter Doig’s pictorial world is at once strange, romantic – and hypermodern. Internationally he (b. 1959 in Edinburgh) is considered to be one of the most fascinating painters of our time – and has achieved the status of a ’contemporary classic’.

Doig masters techniques from both past and present – and the layers of paint on his canvases often act as small alchemical miracles, the eye can enjoy and frolic in.

He bases his works on a private stock of images – photographs, magazine clippings and record covers, film material and found objects, which he incorporates in his paintings in a new way. Doig’s pictorial world is in every way magical. The exhibition has been organized in collaboration with Fondation Beyeler in Riehen – and presents 30 of Doig’s oil paintings in large formats and a selection of his graphic works on paper

The exhibition is supported by C. L. David Foundation and Collection. 

Louisiana Museum of Museum Art || Exhibition: Peter Doig || until 16.08.2015

Louisiana Museum of Museum Art || Exhibition: Peter Doig || until 16.08.2015

Louisiana Museum of Museum Art || Exhibition: Peter Doig || until 16.08.2015

Louisiana Museum of Museum Art || Exhibition: Peter Doig || until 16.08.2015

Louisiana Museum of Museum Art || Exhibition: Peter Doig || until 16.08.2015

Louisiana Museum of Museum Art || Exhibition: Peter Doig || until 16.08.2015

Louisiana Museum of Museum Art || Exhibition: Peter Doig || until 16.08.2015

Louisiana Museum of Museum Art || Exhibition: Peter Doig || until 16.08.2015

Louisiana Museum of Museum Art || Exhibition: Peter Doig || until 16.08.2015

Louisiana Museum of Museum Art || Exhibition: Peter Doig || until 16.08.2015

Louisiana Museum of Museum Art || Exhibition: Peter Doig || until 16.08.2015

Louisiana Museum of Museum Art || Exhibition: Peter Doig || until 16.08.2015

Source: Louisiana Museum of Modern Art

Centre Pompidou, Paris || Exhibition: Mona Hatoum || until 28.09.2015

In a world driven by contradictions, geopolitical tensions and diversified aesthetics, Mona Hatoum offers us an output that achieves unrivalled universality ? a body of work that has become a “model” for numerous contemporary artists. The Palestinian-born British artist is one of the key representatives of the international contemporary scene. Her work stands out for the relevance of its discourse, the perfect match between the forms and materials used, the multidisciplinary aspect of her work and her original, committed reinterpretation of contemporary art movements (performance, kineticism and minimalism).

After staging the first museum exhibition dedicated to Mona Hatoum’s work twenty years ago, the Centre Pompidou is now devoting its first major monograph exhibition to her, featuring a hundred-odd pieces, and covering the multidisciplinary aspect of her work from 1977 to 2015. Without any chronological order, similar to a “map” of her career path, the exhibition provides audiences with a journey through her output based on formal and sensitive affinities between the works. In this way, the performances of the Eighties, whether documented in photos, drawings or videos, are seen in relation to installations, sculptures, drawings, photographs and objects dating from the late Eighties to the present day.

Mona Hatoum, born in the Lebanon in 1952 to parents of Palestinian origin, left that country in 1975 for a short stay in London just when war broke out in her homeland. She remained in the British capital, and began to study art. Her work falls into two main periods. During the 1980s, she explored the realm of performance and video. Her work at that time was narrative, and focused on social and political questions. From the 1990s onwards, her output has involved more “permanent” works ? installations, sculptures and drawings. Now situating herself as part of the avant-garde, Mona Hatoum explores installations influenced by kineticism and phenomenological theories, and other installations that can be defined as post-minimalist, using materials found in the industrial world (grids and barbed wire), or in her own environment (hair). Some of these installations and sculptures, most of which have a political dimension, are imbued with feminism. Around her gravitate somewhat Surrealist objects, works on paper produced with unusual everyday materials or photographs taken during trips, which have a link with other works in the exhibition.

 Mona Hatoum, So Much I Want to Say, 1983  Reproduction of a work

Mona Hatoum, So Much I Want to Say, 1983
Reproduction of a work

 Mona Hatoum, Corps étranger, 1994  Reproduction of a work

Mona Hatoum, Corps étranger, 1994
Reproduction of a work

 Mona Hatoum, Measures of Distance, 1988  Reproduction of a work

Mona Hatoum, Measures of Distance, 1988
Reproduction of a work

 Mona Hatoum, Light Sentence, 1992  Reproduction of a work

Mona Hatoum, Light Sentence, 1992
Reproduction of a work

https://www.centrepompidou.fr/id/cMbapqd/rBgjkgG/en

Source: Centre Pompidou