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Tales from the Colony Room: Art and Bohemia
Tales from the Colony Room: Art and Bohemia Exhibition dates: 22 April – 6 June 2020 Private view: 22 April, 6 pm – 9 pm Amelia Troubridge, Michael Wojas hoovering at The Colony Rooms, 2008, Giclée digital archival print, 16 x 12 in. © Amelia Troubridge. Courtesy of Dellasposa Galley In April, Dellasposa gallery will present Tales from the Colony Room: Art and Bohemia, a group ex- hibition of artists associated with The Colony Room Club. For more than fifty years this notorious Soho drinking den attracted some of the most important names in British art, from Francis Bacon and Lucian Freud to Damien Hirst and Tracey Emin. The exhibition will feature works by Bacon, Freud, Hirst and Emin, along with pieces by Sir Eduardo Paolozzi, Sir Peter Blake, Patrick Caulfield, Frank Auerbach, Keith Coventry and Langlands and Bell, and many other key modern and contemporary British artists. Dellasposa I 2A Bathurst Street I London I W2 2SD I t: +44 (0) 20 32 86 10 17 I www.dellasposa.com Curated by the artist and author Darren Coffield, the exhibition will feature works by artists dating from 1948 up to when it closed in 2008, and coincides with the book launch of a new biography of the club by Darren Coffield entitled Tales from the Colony Room: Soho’s Lost Bohemia. For press information, please contact Albany Arts Communications: Mark Inglefield Carla von der Becke [email protected] [email protected] t: +44 (0) 20 78 79 88 95; m: +44 (0) 75 84 19 95 00 t: +44 (0) 20 78 79 88 95; m: +44 (0) 79 74 25 29 94 Notes to Editors: The Colony Room Club The Colony Room, formerly located at 41 Dean Street, Soho, was founded in 1948 by Muriel Belcher. -
R.B. Kitaj: Obsessions
PRESS RELEASE 2012 R.B. Kitaj: Obsessions The Art of Identity (21 Feb - 16 June 2013) Jewish Museum London Analyst for Our Time (23 Feb - 16 June 2013) Pallant House Gallery, Chichester, West Sussex A major retrospective exhibition of the work of R. B. R.B. Kitaj, Juan de la Cruz, 1967, Oil on canvas, Astrup Fearnley Museum of Modern Art, Oslo; If Not, Not, 1975, Oil and black chalk on canvas, Scottish Kitaj (1932-2007) - one of the most significant National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh © R.B. Kitaj Estate. painters of the post-war period – displayed concurrently in two major venues for its only UK showing. Later he enrolled at the Ruskin School of Art in Oxford, and then, in 1959, he went to the Royal College of Art in This international touring show is the first major London, where he was a contemporary of artists such as retrospective exhibition in the UK since the artist’s Patrick Caulfield and David Hockney, the latter of whom controversial Tate show in the mid-1990s and the first remained his closest painter friend throughout his life. comprehensive exhibition of the artist’s oeuvre since his death in 2007. Comprised of more than 70 works, R.B. During the 1960s Kitaj, together with his friends Francis Kitaj: Obsessions comes to the UK from the Jewish Museum Bacon, Frank Auerbach and Lucian Freud were Berlin and will be shown concurrently at Pallant House instrumental in pioneering a new, figurative art which defied Gallery, Chichester and the Jewish Museum London. the trend in abstraction and conceptualism. -
Francis Bacon and the Colony Room
Francis Bacon and The Colony Room Richard Calvocoressi On September 1, 1983, the American pho- his copy, the magazine would print a brief euphe- tographer Neal Slavin photographed the habit- mistic apology: “Jeffrey Bernard is unwell.” This in conversation with ués of the Colony Room in their cramped was later used by Keith Waterhouse for the title Neal Slavin watering hole as part of his project to docu- of his play, which opened in London in 1989 with ment groups of various kinds, which was pub- Peter O’Toole as Bernard. (O’Toole, another lished in his large-format book Britons (1986). notorious drinker, was also a member of the The Colony Room was a private drinking club on In addition to Bacon, Board, Wojas, and a Colony.) Bruce Bernard, though often melan- Dean Street in London’s Soho, founded in 1948 framed photograph of Muriel Belcher keeping choly through drink, led a more structured life by Muriel Belcher. Feared and revered in equal a watchful eye, the company immortalized that as a picture editor, writer, and photographer. measure by her clientele, the lesbian Belcher’s day consisted of the actor Tom Baker, of Doctor While in New York last November for the foulmouthed, camp wit was legendary. The Who fame; the interior decorator and fashion installation of the Francis Bacon: Late Paintings club’s earliest and most celebrated member was designer Thea Porter; John McEwen, art critic exhibition, I discussed the shoot with Neal Slavin Francis Bacon, but other regulars included the of The Spectator magazine; Michael Clark, a over lunch. -
Alberto Giacometti and the Crisis of the Monument, 1935–45 A
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Los Angeles Hollow Man: Alberto Giacometti and the Crisis of the Monument, 1935–45 A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy in Art History by Joanna Marie Fiduccia 2017 Ó Copyright by Joanna Marie Fiduccia 2017 ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION Hollow Man: Alberto Giacometti and the Crisis of the Monument, 1935–45 by Joanna Marie Fiduccia Doctor of Philosophy in Art History University of California, Los Angeles, 2017 Professor George Thomas Baker, Chair This dissertation presents the first extended analysis of Alberto Giacometti’s sculpture between 1935 and 1945. In 1935, Giacometti renounced his abstract Surrealist objects and began producing portrait busts and miniature figures, many no larger than an almond. Although they are conventionally dismissed as symptoms of a personal crisis, these works unfold a series of significant interventions into the conventions of figurative sculpture whose consequences persisted in Giacometti’s iconic postwar work. Those interventions — disrupting the harmonious relationship of surface to interior, the stable scale relations between the work and its viewer, and the unity and integrity of the sculptural body — developed from Giacometti’s Surrealist experiments in which the production of a form paradoxically entailed its aggressive unmaking. By thus bridging Giacometti’s pre- and postwar oeuvres, this decade-long interval merges two ii distinct accounts of twentieth-century sculpture, each of which claims its own version of Giacometti: a Surrealist artist probing sculpture’s ambivalent relationship to the everyday object, and an Existentialist sculptor invested in phenomenological experience. This project theorizes Giacometti’s artistic crisis as the collision of these two models, concentrated in his modest portrait busts and tiny figures. -
Biographies Frank Auerbach
BIOGRAPHIES FRANK AUERBACH (B. 1931) Frank Auerbach is one of Britain’s foremost post-War painters. Born in Berlin in 1931, he came to Britain in 1939, just before his eighth birthday, as a refugee from Nazi Germany. After attending Bunce Court School in Kent, he moved to London in 1947, where he has lived and worked since. He rarely paints elsewhere and describes London as his world: “I’ve been wandering around these streets for so long that I’ve become attached to them and as fond of them as people are to their pets.” Auerbach was taught by David Bomberg at the Borough Polytechnic, which he continued to attend whilst also studying at St Martin’s School of Art and the Royal College of Art in London. During this time he became friends with Leon Kossoff; their work has often been compared. In 1954 he occupied a studio in Camden Town which had previously been used by Kossoff, and he has been based there ever since. Auerbach has received many honours. In 1986 he was selected for the British Pavilion at the XLII Venice Biennale, winning the Golden Lion Prize along with Sigmar Polke; in 2015, Tate Britain held a major retrospective, featuring work from the 1950s to the present day. Catherine Lampert, curator and selector of the exhibition, has had a long working relationship with Auerbach, and has sat for him in his studio every week for 37 years. ALEXANDER AUGUSTUS (B. 1988) Alexander Augustus is part of a new generation of artists who create spectacular installation works that are comprised of meticulously made elements, using classic methods: bronze- casting, painting, woodblock, textiles, metalwork, and theatre. -
London Calling: Bacon, Freud, Kossoff, Andrews, Auerbach, and Kitaj
NEWS FROM THE GETTY news.getty.edu | [email protected] DATE: May 6, 2016 MEDIA CONTACT FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Amy Hood Getty Communications (310) 440-6427 [email protected] J. PAUL GETTY MUSEUM PRESENTS LONDON CALLING: BACON, FREUD, KOSSOFF, ANDREWS, AUERBACH, AND KITAJ London Calling is the first major U.S. exhibition of these “School of London” artists July 26 – November 13 2016 at the J. Paul Getty Museum, Getty Center LOS ANGELES — From the 1940s through the 1980s, a prominent group of London- based artists developed new styles and approaches to depicting the human figure and the landscape. These painters resisted the abstraction, minimalism, and conceptualism that dominated contemporary art at the time, instead focusing on depicting contemporary life through innovative figurative works. On view at the J. Paul Getty Museum from July 26 to November 13, 2016, London Calling: Bacon, Freud, Kossoff, Andrews, Auerbach, and Kitaj represents the first major American museum exhibition to explore the leaders of this movement, often called the “School of London,” as central to a richer and more complex understanding of 20th century painting. The exhibition includes 80 paintings, drawings, and prints by Francis Leigh Bowery, 1991. Lucian Freud (British, born Germany, Bacon, Lucian Freud, Leon Kossoff, Michael 1922 - 2011). Oil on canvas. © Lucian Freud Archive / Andrews, Frank Auerbach, and R.B. Kitaj. Bridgeman Copyright Service. Tate: Presented anonymously 1994. Repro Credit: Photo © Tate, London 2016. “The majority of paintings and drawings in the Getty Museum’s collection are fundamentally concerned with the rendition of the human figure and landscape up to 1900,” says Timothy Potts, director of the J. -
Generation Painting: Abstraction and British Art, 1955–65 Saturday 5 March 2016, 09:45-17:00 Howard Lecture Theatre, Downing College, Cambridge
Generation Painting: Abstraction and British Art, 1955–65 Saturday 5 March 2016, 09:45-17:00 Howard Lecture Theatre, Downing College, Cambridge 09:15-09:40 Registration and coffee 09:45 Welcome 10:00-11:20 Session 1 – Chaired by Dr Alyce Mahon (Trinity College, Cambridge) Crossing the Border and Closing the Gap: Abstraction and Pop Prof Martin Hammer (University of Kent) Fellow Persians: Bridget Riley and Ad Reinhardt Moran Sheleg (University College London) Tailspin: Smith’s Specific Objects Dr Jo Applin (University of York) 11:20-11:40 Coffee 11:40-13:00 Session 2 – Chaired by Dr Jennifer Powell (Kettle’s Yard) Abstraction between America and the Borders: William Johnstone’s Landscape Painting Dr Beth Williamson (Independent) The Valid Image: Frank Avray Wilson and the Biennial Salon of Commonwealth Abstract Art Dr Simon Pierse (Aberystwyth University) “Unity in Diversity”: New Vision Centre and the Commonwealth Maryam Ohadi-Hamadani (University of Texas at Austin) 13:00-14:00 Lunch and poster session 14:00-15:20 Session 3 – Chaired by Dr James Fox (Gonville & Caius College, Cambridge) In the Thick of It: Auerbach, Kossoff and the Landscape of Postwar Painting Lee Hallman (The Graduate Center, CUNY) Sculpture into Painting: John Hoyland and New Shape Sculpture in the Early 1960s Sam Cornish (The John Hoyland Estate) Painting as a Citational Practice in the 1960s and After Dr Catherine Spencer (University of St Andrews) 15:20-15:50 Tea break 15:50-17:00 Keynote paper and discussion Two Cultures? Patrick Heron, Lawrence Alloway and a Contested -
The Personal Collection of R.B. Kitaj, Originator of the School of London, to Be Sold at Christie’S London in February 2008
For Immediate Release 21 December 2007 Contact: Rhiannon Broomfield +44 (0) 207 389 2117 [email protected] THE PERSONAL COLLECTION OF R.B. KITAJ, ORIGINATOR OF THE SCHOOL OF LONDON, TO BE SOLD AT CHRISTIE’S LONDON IN FEBRUARY 2008 ‘Of course it’s good fun to play the rebel—I’ve often said that I feel like I’m some well-paid misfit trudging down the Zeitgeist road and meeting all the art troops marching in the opposite direction (some of whom even wave genially to me)’ R.B. Kitaj, quoted in R. Morphet, R.B. Kitaj: A Retrospective, London, 1994 The Collection of R.B. Kitaj: Thursday 7 February 2008 at 1pm Christie’s London London – On 7 February 2008, Christie’s will pay tribute to R.B. Kitaj (1932-2007), a celebrated artist and the originator of the ‘School of London.’ The Collection of R.B. Kitaj comprises over 50 works from the painter’s personal collection, the majority of which were created by artists he associated with the ‘School of London’ such as Lucian Freud, Frank Auerbach, David Hockney and of course Kitaj himself. The works pay a moving and insightful testimony to the friendships between Kitaj and these fellow artists, many of whom are now major fixtures in the Post-War and Contemporary Art field. This highly personal collection includes rare works, some of them gifts from the artists, and many of them appear at auction for the first time including oil paintings, drawings and prints; the collection is estimated in the region of £3 million. -
Sir Hugh Casson Interviewed by Cathy Courtney: Full Transcript of the Interview
IN PARTNERSHIP WITH NATIONAL LIFE STORIES LEADERS OF NATIONAL LIFE Sir Hugh Casson Interviewed by Cathy Courtney C408/16 This transcript is copyright of the British Library Board. Please refer to the Oral History curators at the British Library prior to any publication or broadcast from this document. Oral History The British Library 96 Euston Road NW1 2DB 020 7412 7404 [email protected] IMPORTANT Every effort is made to ensure the accuracy of this transcript, however no transcript is an exact translation of the spoken word, and this document is intended to be a guide to the original recording, not replace it. Should you find any errors please inform the Oral History curators ([email protected]) British Library Sound Archive National Life Stories Interview Summary Sheet Title Page Ref no: C408/16/01-24 Playback no: F1084 – F1093; F1156 – F1161; F1878 – F1881; F2837 – F2838; F6797 Collection title: Leaders of National Life Interviewee’s surname: Casson Title: Mr Interviewee’s forename: Hugh Sex: Male Occupation: Architect Date and place of birth: 1910 - 1999 Mother’s occupation: Father’s occupation: Dates of recording: 1990.02.13, 1990.02.16, 1990.02.19, 1990.03.13, 1990.04.19, 1990.05.11, 1990.05.22, 1990.08.28, 1990.07.31, 1990.08.07, 1991.05.22, 1991.06.03, 1991.06.18, 1991.07.13 Location of interview: Interviewer's home, National Sound Archive and Interviewee's home Name of interviewer: Cathy Courtney Type of recorder: Marantz CP430 Type of tape: TDK 60 Mono or stereo: Stereo Speed: N/A Noise reduction: Dolby B Original or copy: Original Additional material: Copyright/Clearance: Interviewer’s comments: Sir Hugh Casson C408/016/F1084-A Page 1 F1084 Side A First interview with Hugh Casson - February 13th, 1990. -
Freud Sells for £7.86 Million ($15.6 Million / €11.6 Million) at Christie's £74 Million Record Sale of Post-War and Contem
For Immediate Release 20 June 2007 Contact: Rhiannon Broomfield 020 7389 2664 [email protected] FREUD SELLS FOR £7.86 MILLION ($15.6 MILLION / €11.6 MILLION) AT CHRISTIE’S £74 MILLION RECORD SALE OF POST-WAR AND CONTEMPORARY ART • Christie’s auction realises £74.1 million ($147.3 million / € 109.6million), the highest ever total for the category in Europe • Lucian Freud’s portrait of Bruce Bernard realises £7.86 million ($15.6 million / €11.6 million) - the world record price for any work by a living European artist at auction • 15 artist records smashed, including those for Lucian Freud, Piero Manzoni, Michael Andrews and Antoni Tàpies, among others • 17 works sell for over £1 million / 42 for over $1 million London – Christie’s record-breaking auction of Post-War and Contemporary Art on 20 June 2007 realised £74,072,800 / $147,256,726 / €109,553,671, a record total for any auction in this category in Europe. The top lot of the sale was a portrait of Bruce Bernard by Lucian Freud (b.1922) which sold for £7,860,000 ($15,625,680/ €11,624,940), a world record price at auction for any work by a living European artist and a world record price for the artist at auction. The fast-paced sale saw auction records broken, including those for Lucian Freud, Piero Manzoni, Michael Andrews and Antoni Tàpies among others, as international clients competed for the works on offer. Buyer activity at the auction was 25% United Kingdom, 37% rest of Europe, 27% Americas, 10% Asia and 1% Middle East (by lot). -
Review2003/2004
NPG_AR_04_text.film 10/12/05 9:52 AM Page 1 Review 2003/2004 2 Preface by the Chairman of the Trustees 3 Foreword by the Director 4 The Collections 8 Photographs Collection 10 Heinz Archive and Library 12 Conservation 14 The Galleries 16 Exhibitions 18 Education 20 Partnerships and National Programmes 24 Information Technology 26 Visitors 28 Trading 30 Fundraising and Development 36 Financial Report 40 Research 42 List of Acquisitions 48 Staff The Regency in the Weldon Galleries © Andrew Putler Front cover Mary Moser by George Romney, c.1770–71 Back cover David David Beckham by Sam Taylor-Wood, 2004 © the artist NPG_AR_04_text.film 10/12/05 9:52 AM Page 2 This Review records another highly successful During the year we welcomed two new Trustees, 2 year for the Gallery under the energetic leadership Amelia Chilcott Fawcett, an investment banker, and comprehensive management approach of recently appointed to chair our Development Sandy Nairne in his first full year as our Director. Board, and Professor Robert Boucher, an engineer and Vice-Chancellor of Sheffield University. We have continued to develop the collection We lost an ex-officio Trustee with the tragically with some outstanding acquisitions and untimely death of Lord Williams of Mostyn. exciting commissions. Three of the galleries, He has been succeeded by Baroness Amos, the refurbished Weldon Regency Galleries, the Lord President of the Council. Tudor and the Early Twentieth Century Galleries, were imaginatively rehung, while the frequent We relish and revel in our responsibility to rotation of portraits in the Contemporary build and exhibit a collection of portraits of Galleries continues to attract wide approval. -
The Jeremy Lancaster Collection to Highlight Christie’S Frieze Week
PRESS RELEASE | LONDON FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 29 JULY 2 0 1 9 THE JEREMY LANCASTER COLLECTION TO HIGHLIGHT CHRISTIE’S FRIEZE WEEK DEDICATED EVENING AUCTION ON 1 OCTOBER 2019 Philip Guston, Language I, 1973, estimate: £1,500,000-2,000,000 London – Christie’s Frieze Week programme will be launched with a dedicated auction of the remarkable private collection of Jeremy Lancaster on 1 October 2019. A chorus of vivid colour, radical form and brilliant innovation, the collection showcases some of the greatest achievements in post-war British painting, complemented by a stellar selection of European and American works. Many of the works were acquired through the gallery of Leslie Waddington, and a number have passed through notable collections such as Herbert Read, E. J. Power and Charles Saatchi. Such distinguished provenance is testament not only to a shared championship of the post-war British art scene, but also to the exchange with the European and American avant-gardes in which Waddington and his clients played such a vital role. Several of the works have been on long-term loan to museum collections and Jeremy Lancaster was a trustee at Birmingham’s Ikon Gallery of contemporary art and the Barber Institute of Fine Arts. A frequent traveller with a keen appetite for art and knowledge, Jeremy Lancaster was in part influenced by the seminal exhibition ‘A New Spirit in Painting’. Undoubtedly a profound moment in the landscape of contemporary art it was staged by London’s Royal Academy of Arts in 1981. The direction of his collecting taste follows a similar dedication to transatlantic discourse in paintings from Frank Auerbach and Howard Hodgkin to Philip Guston, Robert Ryman and Josef Albers.