November 9, 2020No Comments

Interview with Claire Luxton | photography and multimedia

Artebella, in collaboration with MTArt Agency, interviews multidisciplinary artist Claire Luxton, who describes her work as an introspective journey that reflects the uncertainty of society. Luxton explains how she wanted to bring nature to the people with her recent commission for a video art on Marble Arch in London, which will start on January 2021.
#claireluxton #artebella #mtartagency 

March 29, 2020No Comments

Londra

Rubrica di viaggi (mentali)
Chi l'ha detto che tra le mura di casa non si può viaggiare?

Ecco a voi una piccola guida con le illustrazioni di Anna, per continuare a viaggiare in compagnia. Segui il cappellino rosso di Eleswim tra città, musei, viaggi mentali e cibo.

Londra by Anna Obert
Eleswim traveling to London by Anna Obert
London Skyline
London Skyline from the Shard, March 2020

Per molti stranieri residenti all’estero non è stato facile scegliere cosa fare a fronte del lockdown a catena di ogni Stato e decidere se affrontare l’odissea per tornare al proprio paese oppure, armarsi di pazienza e rimanere fermi. Io sono tornata nella mia città natale, sebbene Londra sia stata la mia casa per questi ultimi due anni e mezzo. Doverla abbandonare così di fretta è stato sicuramente difficile. Tutto questo però non impedisce né a me, né a voi di tornare a visitarla, almeno con il pensiero. Cosa c’è di più bello di una passeggiata lungo il fiume, con i grattacieli a far da sfondo, la pioggerellina tenue abituale compagna, i runners, gli skaters, i fastidiosi bikers a fare da contorno… dove saremo diretti?

St. Paul Cathedral, Millennium Bridge, London
St. Paul Cathedral, Millennium bridge view from Bankside, London, UK

Risalendo River Thames si arriva al Millennium Bridge, ponte pedonale che sta prorpio di fronte a... La Tate Modern!

Tate Modern
Tate Modern by Anna Obert

Maestoso complesso in mattoni rossastri, la Tate Modern si sviluppa lungo il Tamigi, opposta alla cattedrale di St. Paul, ma attenta a non rubare la scena. La prima volta che ho messo piede qui dentro mi sono ritrovata in un ingresso spaziosissimo, la Turbine Hall, che all’epoca (due annetti fa) ospitava il pensiero di Superflex, una collettiva di designers che progettando spazi ricreativi, hanno voluto offrire spunti di gioco ed incontri, sotto l’altissimo soffitto in ingresso. Ne ha parlato anche Dezeen

Superflex installation, Turbine Hall, Tate Modern, October 2017

La Tete Modern ha ospitato mostre spettacolari dalla sua apertura nel 2000 ad oggi. Siamo fortunati abbastanza da poter godere di un’ampia trasposizione online delle sue sale, con racconti e spiegazioni utili. Come la libreria multicolor dell'artista Afro-Inglese Yinka Shonibare CBE, opera che racconta come il Regno Unito di oggi sia frutto di ondate migratorie continue, un mix di etnie e culture differenti che da anni popolano le sue terre, a volte solo di passaggio, a volte per restare.

May 2019, The British Library of Yinka Shonibare
Olafur Eliasson Exhibition, Tate Modern, July 2019

Tanta cultura mette fame... Dopo ore al Museo, fisico o virtuale che sia, è ora del ristoro.

Che fare quindi ora? Non ci resta che mangiare… 

Fish & Chips by Anna Obert

The End.

June 25, 2018 — Comments are off for this post.

London Christo’s Mastaba: a vexed reason why enjoy Hyde Park this Summer.

These days London is gifting us with warm sunny days that look like a miracle. Even more for an Italian recently moved to London like me, who found the first British-winter extremely hard to face. (My body is still trying to get used to the constant wind). Luckily, as soon as the sun brights in the sky, the brain fills up with endorphins and all the Vitamine D taken the whole fall starts to show its effects.

A shiny Hyde Park at all its splendor is the context in which the Christo’s Mastaba is located. Right in the center of the Serpentine Lake stands out this massive trapezoidal Mastaba. That is the name with Egyptians used to call tombs in ancient Mesopotamia. It is not clear whether there is a connection between this work and the story of Mastaba itself. “All interpretations accepted”, declared the artist at the opening of the floating installation.

Christo's Mastaba, Serpentine Lake, London, June 2018. Ph: Andrea Flisi

Christo's Mastaba, Serpentine Lake, London, June 2018. Ph: Andrea Flisi

Christo is not new to controversial works of art. The political situation of Europe by the time he grew up has influenced his career as an artist throughout his whole life so far. His early education happened during the Soviet Socialist government and once moved to Hungary from Bulgaria, he later was forced to flee due to the Hungarian Revolution broke out. After years spent as a political refugee, he established in Paris in 1958, where he met his future wife Jeanne-Claude. The two artists together realized large-scale and site-specific installations, wrapping buildings and pieces of natural landscape, and enclosing entire islands with fabrics. The recent “Floating Piers” at the Iseo Lake in the north of Italy is an example. Christo and Jeanne-Claude made works that stand out as some of the most grandiose, ambitious, monumentally-scaled artworks ever.

Christo's Mastaba Lido view, Serpentine Lake, London, June 2018.

Christo's Mastaba Lido view, Serpentine Lake, London, June 2018.

Although usually, Land Art plays with the dualism of melting with its surroundings while being something extremely extraneous, Christo’s art appears to push just the last concept. The artist works rely on creating a strong contrast with the other elements of the site in which they are located. For this reason, the Mastaba’s barrels are painted in white, red and lavender colors, which contrast with the blue-greenish external environment on purpose.

The sculpture consists of a 20-meter-high installation made of 7,506 horizontally piled barrels, which are binds together by an invisible engine. The shape is pyramid-like but with the tip edge cut. The artwork is free to all and it is entirely funded and created by the artist himself, using incomes from his original works. It represents a specific choice to promote the idea of total and unconditional freedom of being an artist. He has never used public money or private sponsorship in order to create his art. A massive message of hope for those independent artists who are trying not to be involved in the common art market dynamics.

Christo's Mastaba, Serpentine Lake, London, June 2018. Ph: Andrea Flisi

Christo's Mastaba, Serpentine Lake, London, June 2018. Ph: Andrea Flisi

The installation lasts until the 23rd of September, and it comes together with a retrospective exhibition of Christo and Jeanne-Claude at the Serpentine Gallery.

I hadn’t the chance to see the Floating Piers when I was still in Italy, therefore I am so happy now to be able to enjoy this grandiose work of him which is the first large-scale public-sculpture in the UK.

 

January 23, 2018No Comments

Welcome 2018!

Welcome 2018! This week London is going to be so vibrant: full of art exhibition openings and ready to get this new year started.

TODAY (the 23rd of January):

The Franco-British artist and filmmaker Charlotte Colbert opens her large-scale, multi- screen-sculpture exhibition at UNIT9 in Shoreditch, London.

Entitled ‘Benefits Supervisor Sleeping’, the installation is a filmed, multi-screen portrait of Sue Tilley, the legendary model for Lucian Freud’s famous paintings of the Benefits Supervisor, soon to be exhibited in Tate Britain’s  ‘All Too Human: Bacon, Freud and a Century of Painting Life’ (28 Feb – 27  Aug, 2018).

Benefits Supervisor Sleeping, Charlotte Colbert, 2017

Benefits Supervisor Sleeping, Charlotte Colbert, 2017

Charlotte Colbert
‘Benefits Supervisor Sleeping’
Charlotte Colbert, 2017
corten steel, LCD screens, moving image
132 x 265 x 80 cm.
UNIT9
The Huntingdon Estate
Ebor St / Bethnal Green Rd
London E1 6JU

TornabuoniArt presents Piero Dorazio - Chromatic Fantasies (1948-82).

This is the first London solo show of the Italian abstract painter Piero Dorazio (1927 – 2005) in a generation. The exhibition will span 35 years of the artist’s career, from his early, cubist-inspired paintings to his large-scale abstract explosions of colour. It will also retrace his influences, from Giacomo Balla to the Abstract Expressionists whom he met during his numerous stays in the USA.

Tre acque, Piero Dorazio, 1972

Tre acque, Piero Dorazio, 1972

Piero Dorazio
Tre Acque [Three Waters]
1972
oil on canvas
138x361cm


TORNABUONI ARTE
46 Albemarle Street
London, UK W1S 4JN

Cardi gallery opens Claudio Verna solo show, Italian Artist from the 60's.

At the peak of his artistic expression his style reach articulates from absolute rigour, to an intense emotional involvement, both reflected on canvas through the use of colour with high saturation and brightness.

CLAUDIO VERNA Pittura, 1974/75, oil on canvas, 140x180 cm, (N.CAT. 385)

Pittura, Claudio Verna, 1974/75

Claudio Verna
Pittura, 1974/75
Oil on canvas
140x180 cm
(N.CAT. 385)

Cardi Gallery | London
22 Grafton Street
London, UK W1S4EX

 

Those are only 3 of the many openings happening this week in London, but to have a complete overview of all the beautiful upcoming art exhibitions, let's have a look at this brilliant website:

http://newexhibitions.com/current/

Enjoy!

November 23, 2017No Comments

“Monet: the very first Instagrammer!”

Is how Francesco Menconi, theater director, and art lover, well defined Monet’s series. I totally fell in love with this ironic, but accurate definition.

Impressionists in London” is the current EY Exhibition on display at Tate Britain from the 2nd November 2017 to the 29th April 2018.
On sight, are the paintings depicting London from the major impressionists’ point of view. It is surprising how familiar they could seem. Not only because, of course, they represent London’s landmarks, but especially because they represent a common feeling. Claude Monet, Alfred Sisley, Camille Pissarro among others at that time were looking for a place to escape the Franco-Prussian War. London, with his thriving art market, was definitely an attractive destination. For this reason, their paintings communicate passion, anger, and wait. Watching them, we can see and feel nostalgia, melancholy, and a truly fascinating atmosphere. These are exactly the feelings I've felt, moving from Italy to London and trying to familiarize with such a huge city. For these reasons, I am sure that this exhibition could be revealing for many tourists and newcomers, but could also be nothing more than a showcase of technical practices for the more skeptical and disenchanted others. Indeed, it is a strongly criticized exhibition, even defined as "dull" and "the worst show about impressionists" by some journalists.
A part of personal judgments, the six paintings from Claude Monet’s famous Houses of Parliament series on display, are real masterpieces. Each one held in the collections of different museums across the USA, France, and Germany. This grouping is the largest number of works from the series to be exhibited in Europe since 1973, and the room that put together paintings depicting river Thames (with many different filters as if it was on Instagram) is magical. Visitors can draw comparisons between the works. Including the variations in the color of the water, the appearance of the sky and the changing atmosphere due to London's infamous fogs. 

I know that you will probably get lost in Winter Wonderland, but it is definitely worthy to see for those who passed by London in this winter season!

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