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Showing posts with the label Wilhelmina Barns-Graham

Very Rich Hours in Chantilly

It is a once-in-a-lifetime experience: the chance to see one of the greatest -- and most fragile -- works of European art before your very eyes. The illustrated manuscript known as the  Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry contains images that have shaped our view of the late Middle Ages, but it's normally kept under lock and key at the Château de Chantilly, north of Paris. It's only been exhibited twice in the past century. Now newly restored, the glowing pages of  Les Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry are on show to the public for just a few months. "Approche, approche," the Duke of Berry's usher tells the visitors to the great man's table for the feast that will mark the start of the New Year. It's also your invitation to examine closely the illustration for January, one of the 12 months from the calendar in this Book of Hours -- a collection of prayers and other religious texts -- that form the centrepiece of this exhibition in Chantilly.  It's su...

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What Do Artists Do All Day?

Work, work, work, of course. It was Thomas Edison who said genius is 1% inspiration and 99% perspiration, and for every artist's light-bulb moment, there'll be a lot of hours sitting in the studio.     A Century of the Artist's Studio: 1920-2020  at the Whitechapel Gallery in east London takes us to a hundred of those studios to witness the hard labour of the creative process in an ambitious and often fun exhibition.  "Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday...." intone the voices in the video From March to April.... 2020 by the Dubai-based Ramin and Rokni Haerizadeh and Hesam Rahmanian. Tehching Hsieh took it further.  One-Year Performance saw him clocking on daily. In Darren Almond's A Real Time Piece nothing disturbs the eerie quiet of the artist's empty studio apart from the loud thwock once a minute of the changing display of the mechanical digital clock on the wall. In this other piece by Almond there's not a sound to be heard, but if the...

Woman Artists and the Spirit of Virginia Woolf in Chichester

It's perhaps the portraits that provide some of the most memorable images in Virginia Woolf: an exhibition inspired by her writings at the Pallant House Gallery in Chichester. There are 80 women artists featured in this show aiming to build on Woolf's perspectives on feminism and creaticity -- quite a contrast from Chichester's last, testosterone-laden Pop Art exhibition. Considering how tough it was for many of them to make their way in a male-dominated environment, there's a remarkable self-assurance about the way painters like Dod Procter and Ethel Walker  committed themselves to canvas. The theme running through this show is one of pioneering women defying convention, as Woolf did, and not just in the 20th century. In 1877, Louise Jopling is looking you straight in the eye. She's from Manchester. Bet you blink first. Coincidentally, Laura Knight was born in 1877, and in the 1930s, by now a dame, she became the first woman artist elected to full members...