Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The Key Art Exhibitions Of 2010

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • The Key Art Exhibitions Of 2010

    THE KEY ART EXHIBITIONS OF 2010
    By Richard Dorment

    Daily Telegraph
    12:01PM GMT 29 Dec 2009
    UK

    >From Van Gogh at the Royal Academy to the British Museum's West

    African sculptures, a preview of the essential shows for 2010.

    Detail from a self-portrait by Vincent Van Gogh Next year begins with
    a Royal Academy blockbuster, but this one with a difference. The Real
    Van Gogh: The Artist and His Letters (Jan 23-April 18) will put the
    letters Van Gogh wrote to his brother Theo (often illustrated with
    quick sketches of the picture he is working on) next to the paintings
    he discusses in them. It will be like listening to Van Gogh's unguarded
    thoughts about his own work.

    The title of the show is significant: the artist we meet in these
    letters isn't the wild-eyed madman whose brush was somehow the
    extension of his tormented soul, but a clear-eyed professional who
    speaks and reads three languages fluently, and is as eloquent about
    the works of other artists as he is about his own. Book now, and if
    possible go early or late in the day: this is an intimate show and
    queuing to read the letters will ruin the experience for you.

    The National Gallery starts the year with an international loan
    exhibition focusing on one of its most popular paintings - Paul
    Delaroche's monumental historical pastiche The Execution of Lady
    Jane Grey (Feb 24-May 23). As a child I was told the following no
    doubt apocryphal story: the picture looks the way it does because the
    artist bet a friend that he could paint a grand salon machine with
    five full-length figures, none of whom look out at the spectator. True
    or not, I think of it every time I look at it.

    Concurrently with the National Gallery show, the Wallace Collection
    will be putting on a display of its outstanding collection of
    small-scale paintings by Delaroche.

    A month later in Trafalgar Square, we'll see a gem of an exhibition
    devoted to the Danish Golden Age painter Christen Kobke (1810-48),
    a painter of crystalline landscapes, limpidly clear portraits and
    intimate interiors. Over the summer there will be a hoot of a show
    about the National Gallery's fakes and forgeries and how they are
    detected (June 30-Sept 12) . And then the year ends with Venice:
    Canaletto and His Rivals. If you are anything like me, your heart
    doesn't leap at the thought of seeing a lot of Canalettos at the same
    time, but every time you find yourself really looking at one, you are
    seduced all over again by his treatment of light and colour and detail.

    Tate Modern will wipe that smile right off your face with a show
    devoted to the tragic - and wonderful - American painter Arshile Gorky
    (Feb 10-May 3). Born in Armenia, as a child he survived the Turkish
    genocide in which his mother died. He found happiness and success in
    America, only to have it snatched from him again when ill health and
    a failing marriage led him to take his own life. His unique, highly
    autobiographical semi-abstract paintings of the Forties are the direct
    predecessors of Jackson Pollock's, and also a strong influence on
    the work of Cy Twombly.

    Next up is Henry Moore at Tate Britain, overdue for reassessment
    (Feb 24-Aug 15), with Chris Ofili in tandem (Jan 27-May 16) in a
    mid-career retrospective. Much as I love Ofili's art, it will be
    interesting to see whether he can sustain a show of any size without
    becoming repetitive.

    At Tate Modern, there is a show of an artist who means little to me,
    the Dutch designer, architect and typographer Theo van Doesburg (Feb
    4-May 16). His work is too boring to sustain a whole exhibition on its
    own, and so will be shown alongside contemporaries including Hans Arp,
    El Lissitzky, and Kurt Schwitters.

    Potentially the exhibition of the year opens at the British Museum in
    March with Kingdom of Ife: Sculptures from West Africa (March 4-June
    6), which highlights the culture of what is now Nigeria from the 12th
    to 15th century, and its sculptures in stone, terracotta and copper.

    It was a witty bit of scheduling, I thought, for the BM to run this
    show concurrently with Fra Angelico to Leonardo: Italian Renaissance
    Drawings (April 22-July 25), which will chart the development of
    drawing as an independent art form and means of preserving ideas,
    as opposed to a tool in the creative process of making a painting.

    Then, at the end of the year, the BM mounts a show that should pack
    them in - Journey Through the Afterlife: The Ancient Egyptian Book
    of the Dead includes coffins, masks, statues, amulets and papyrus
    and jewellery (Nov 4-March 6, 2011).

    It's odd how venues you used to take for granted suddenly, and by some
    mysterious alchemy, can't seem to put on a dull show. For me, that's
    happened at the Queen's Gallery, Buckingham Palace, which is always
    enjoyable, but in the past couple of years has been nothing less than
    sensational. I slightly wish their 2010 offering hadn't been called
    Victoria & Albert: Art & Love because the Queen and Prince Consort
    were passionate collectors of contemporary artists such as Landseer,
    Leighton and Frith, but also pioneering in the Prince's taste for
    gold-ground Italian panel paintings (March 19-Oct 31).

    In recent years, I've been depressed to watch the Scottish National
    Gallery cave in to what I assume is Scottish Nationalist pressure to
    include works by Scottish artists in every show they do, whether that
    means putting some awful daub by William McTaggart next to a Monet or
    John "Spanish" Phillip near a Velazquez. This year, it is heartening
    to see that they are putting on a show called Impressionist Gardens,
    curated by Clare Wilsden, whose book of that title opened my eyes
    to the importance that garden design played in the work of Monet,
    Renoir, Manet and Sisley (July 31 July-Oct 17).

    The Hayward Gallery will be closed for repairs during the first half
    of 2010, but I really look forward to Move: Art and Dance Since the
    Sixties (Oct 13-Jan 9, 2011), which will investigate the interaction
    between the visual arts and dance, and will include work by Lygia
    Clark, Robert Morris and Bruce Nauman.

    The Serpentine Gallery kicks off with Richard Hamilton: Modern Moral
    Matters (March 3-April 25), essentially a retrospective, and over the
    summer will stage what should be a thrilling display of photos by
    Turner Prize winner Wolfgang Tillmans (June 26-Oct 20). Judging by
    the photos included in the press release, I expect to be delighted
    by the Whitechapel's show of 150 Years of Photography from India,
    Pakistan and Bangladesh (Jan 21-April 11).

    As the Serpentine proved early on, it is miraculous how smaller
    museums, far from being overshadowed by Tate, the BM, V&A and National
    Gallery, nimbly stage the kind of lively shows that fall under the big
    guys' radar. An example is the show the Courtauld Gallery will mount
    over the winter around one of its greatest treasures - Michelangelo
    Buonarroti's complex allegorical drawing The Dream of Human Life,
    presented to the young Roman nobleman Tommaso de Cavalieri (Oct
    21-Jan 16, 2011). The masterpiece will be shown with letters and
    poems addressed by the besotted sculptor to the young man.

    Then in the autumn comes a major loan exhibition that looks in depth
    at another masterpiece owned by the Courtauld, Cezanne's Card Players,
    including the oil sketches and pencil and watercolour studies (Oct
    21-Jan 16, 2011).

    In the spring, the Wallace Collection will be showing Renaissance and
    Baroque bronzes from the collection of the American architect Peter
    Marino (April 29-July 25). I've seen many of the works that will be
    coming and can tell you that they are of the highest possible quality,
    yet the collection has never been shown in public before.

    Dulwich Picture Gallery continues its consistently surprising
    exhibition programme in 2010 with a show that I think no other
    institution in this country would have dared to do, least of all
    Tate Britain: an exhibition about the Wyeth family of artists, whose
    best-known member, Andrew, divides Americans equally between those
    who think he is America's finest artist and those who think he's a
    sentimental illustrator (June 9-Aug 22).

    And then, following a show at the Wallace a few years ago, Dulwich
    will introduce us to the strange, romantic art of the 17th century
    Italian artist Salvator Rosa, emphasising his love of the occult,
    bandits, wild places, magic and witches (Sept 15-Nov 28).
Working...
X