Skip to main content

Opening and Closing in July

A very eclectic mix of shows this month, and we're starting with an exhibition that's not art at all, but of vital interest to everyone. The Science Museum is investigating the Future of Food , looking at new advances in growing, making, cooking and eating it. On from July 24 to January 4, it's free, though you need to book. Oh, and you get to see this 3,500-year-old sourdough loaf..... At the Lowry in Salford, they're offering a double bill of Quentin Blake and Me & Modern Life: The LS Lowry Collection . The show about Blake, who's written or illustrated more than 500 books, looks aimed at a family audience, while the Lowry exhibition includes borrowed works, marking the Salford arts centre's 25th anniversary. On from July 19 to January 4, and entry is again free, though you need to book a timeslot.  Another anniversary this year is the 250th of the birth of Jane Austen; among the exhibitions around the country is one in Winchester, the city where she died ...

Subscribe to updates

Opening and Closing in April

We'll start this month at the King's Gallery in London, where more than 300 artworks and other objects from the Royal Collection will be on display from April 11 for The Edwardians: Age of Elegance. Illustrating the tastes of the period between the death of Victoria and World War I, the show features the work of John Singer Sargent, Edward Burne-Jones, William Morris and Carl Fabergé, among others. On to November 23.
More Morris at, unsurprisingly, the William Morris Gallery in Walthamstow. Morris Mania, which runs from April 5 to September 21, aims to show how his designs have continued to capture the imagination down the decades, popping up in films and on television, in every part of the home, on trainers, wellies, and even in nuclear submarines....

From much the same era, Guildhall Art Gallery in the City offers Evelyn De Morgan: The Modern Painter in Victorian London from April 4 to January 4. De Morgan's late Pre-Raphaelite work with its beautifully draped female figures can be stunning; we remember seeing Night and Sleep in the very uneven Pre-Raphaelite Sisters exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery a few years ago and thinking it the best thing in the show.

One of Britain's leading Pop Artists, Derek Boshier, died last year, and a new show at Gazelli Art House in the West End -- the first since his death -- zooms in on his output from Pop's breakthrough period in the 1960s. The Way Forward: Derek Boshier and the Sixties, on from April 25 to June 28, also features contemporaries including Peter Blake, Pauline Boty, David Hockney and Patrick Caulfield.     
Two kingdoms united and the course of history changed for centuries to come; 1603 was a momentous year when for the first time one man wore the crowns of both England and Scotland. At the Scottish National Portrait Gallery in Edinburgh, The World of King James VI and I will tell the story of his reign, which ended precisely 400 years ago. More than 140 exhibits will be on show, including paintings, jewellery and costumes, with loans from across the UK. April 26 to September 14. 

A few decades after James, the Netherlands was experiencing its Golden Age. And the big names from that period will grace the walls of the H'ART Museum in Amsterdam -- formerly the Hermitage -- from April 9 in From Rembrandt to Vermeer: Masterpieces from the Leiden Collection, one of the outstanding private collections of Dutch art. There are 18 works by Rembrandt in this show to mark the 750th anniversary of the founding of Amsterdam, and Frans Hals and Jan Steen are among others illustrating how life was lived in 17th-century Holland. Until August 24. 
It's the 160th anniversary of Félix Vallotton's birth, and the centenary of his death. The Swiss are not letting this go by unnoticed; the first of the year's big exhibitions about the Lausanne-born painter, who spent most of his career in France, opens at the Kunst Museum in Winterthur on April 12. Running until September 7, Félix Vallotton: Lost Illusions will have more than 150 works demonstrating all facets of his career. If you can't make it to Winterthur, there's an even bigger show scheduled in Lausanne from late October. 

One of this year's European capitals of culture is Chemnitz in eastern Germany, and among the major exhibitions they've scheduled is a pan-European overview of the realist art of the 1920s and 30s, including the New Objectivity movement in Germany. Some 300 works from 20 countries will be brought together in European Realities at the Museum Gunzenhauser from April 27 to August 10. 
You can't miss the adverts all across Paris for Matisse and Marguerite: Through Her Father's Eyes at the Musée d'Art Moderne. On from April 4 to August 24, this show presents well over 100 works in various media depicting Matisse's eldest daughter and most constant model. Many are being shown in France for the first time. And at the same museum, over the same dates, there's also Gabriele Münter: Painting to the Point, a retrospective of 150 works by the German Expressionist.

You might have thought that the David Hockney exhibition at the Royal Academy in 2012 was enormous. But wait. At Paris's Fondation Louis Vuitton, they'll be providing lots of space for what Hockney says is "the largest exhibition I've ever had". Running from April 9 to August 31, David Hockney 25 will fill the entire building with more than 400 of his works going back to 1955. And that includes A Bigger Splash and Portrait of an Artist (Pool with Two Figures)

Last chance to see....

On until April 27 at Pallant House Gallery in Chichester is Dora Carrington: Beyond Bloomsbury, telling the story of a painter perhaps better known for her complicated personal life than her art. There are some memorable pictures in this enjoyable and interesting show. 

Images

Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema (1836-1912), God Speed, c. 1893. © Royal Collection Enterprises Limited 2024/Royal Collection Trust
Derek Boshier (1937-2024), Highlights, 1966. © Derek Boshier
Eduard Ole (1898-1995), Passengers, 1929, Art Museum of Estonia, Tallinn. Photo: Stanislav Stepaško
Rembrandt van Rijn (1606-1669), Study of a Woman in a White Cap, c. 1640, The Leiden Collection
Dora Carrington (1893-1932), Spanish Landscape with Mountains, c. 1924, Tate. Photo: Tate

Comments

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

What's On in 2025

What will be the exhibition highlights of 2025 around Britain and Europe? At the end of the year, Tate Britain will be marking 250 years since the birth of JMW Turner and John Constable with a potential blockbuster. Meanwhile, the Swiss are  making a big thing  of the 100th anniversary of the death of Félix Vallotton  (a real favourite of ours). Among women artists in the spotlight will be Anna Ancher, Ithell Colquhoun, Artemisia Gentileschi and Suzanne Valadon. Here's a selection of what's coming up, in more or less chronological order; as ever, we make no claim to comprehensiveness, and our choice very much reflects our personal taste. And in our search for the most interesting shows, we're visiting Ascona, Baden-Baden, Chemnitz and Winterthur, among other places.  January  We start off in Paris, at the Pompidou Centre; the 1970s inside-out building is showing its age and it'll be shut in the summer for a renovation programme scheduled to last until 2030. Bef...

Carrington: You've Met Leonora, Now Discover Dora

Carrington: She only wanted to be known by her surname, unwittingly posing a conundrum for art historians, curators and the wider world a century later.  Because it's another somewhat later Carrington, the long-lived Surrealist and totally unrelated, who's recently become Britain's most expensive woman artist. But today we're at Pallant House Gallery in Chichester to see an exhibition not about Leonora but about Dora Carrington. She hated that name Dora -- so Victorian -- but with Leonora so much in the limelight (and the subject of a  recent show at Newlands House in Petworth, just a few miles up the road), the curators at the Pallant didn't have much option, so they've had to call their retrospective  Dora Carrington: Beyond Bloomsbury .  Leonora was a bit of a rebel, as we found out in Petworth. Dora too. But we ought to respect her wish. Carrington, then, has been a bit neglected recently; this is the first show of her works in three decades. And while ther...

Caillebotte: This Is Modern Paris

You won't find a single work of art by Gustave Caillebotte in a British public collection. And yet he's one of the key figures in the Impressionist movement, whose 150th anniversary we're celebrating this year. But over in Paris, he's the subject of a big, big exhibition at the Musée d'Orsay; we jumped on the Eurostar to see it, and, even though  Caillebotte: Painting Men   was the most crowded show we'd been to in quite some time, we absolutely adored it.  And let's start with perhaps the pièce de résistance. Even if you don't know Caillebotte at all, you may have seen this image before; there's something about it that encapsulates late 19th-century Paris, with its view of an intersection between the broad new streets pushed through by that radical city-planner, Baron Haussmann, lined by elegant new buildings. This was the modern city, the modern world. Paris Street; Rainy Day : a painting in which there's nothing really happening, and there...