Tag Archives: London

London: Yoshitomo Nara @ Stephen Friedman

Yoshitomo Nara @ Stephen Friedmann

Following recent solo exhibitions at Yokohama Museum of Art, Japan; Asia Society Museum, New York; Asia Society Hong Kong Center and Reykjavik Art Museum, Iceland,  Japanese artist, Yoshitomo Nara is returning  to the Stephen Friedman Gallery in London for a fourth exhibition of new works .

This show features new paintings on canvas, paintings on cotton mounted wood panel and the largest collection of new drawings on paper.

Adolescent characters and animals are depicted with nuanced considerations of alienation, anger and curiosity. Juxtaposed with slogans and often salty language, they are at once cheeky, vulnerable and threatening.

Yoshitomo Nara @ Stephen Friedmann  Yoshitomo Nara @ Stephen Friedmann   Yoshitomo Nara @ Stephen FriedmannYoshitomo Nara @ Stephen Friedmann

Yoshitomo Nara mentions “This solo exhibition is comprised of ‘paintings’ (on canvas), ‘billboard paintings’ (patched cotton mounted on wood panel) and ‘drawings’ (on paper). These new paintings on canvas are more painterly than other works I have shown previously. They are marked by a conscious use of colour and subtle layering, which has become important in my recent practice. In contrast to my work on canvas, I originally called the paintings on wood panel ‘billboard paintings’, due to their catchy and iconic imagery and the use of flat planes of colour that is reminiscent of the style often used on billboards. Although the ‘billboard paintings’ in this show are still evocative of this style, these ones which are rendered on patchwork cotton are much more painterly, with many layers of colour.

Drawing is natural to me. Without being conscious of the eventual audience, I usually follow my emotions and just draw. For this show I am exhibiting a series of drawings that I think of as being mental images without colour. It is probably the first time that I have shown so many of these drawings all at once. I work in sculpture and installation, but for this exhibition I became very conscious of showing myself as a painter.”

Yoshitomo Nara @ Stephen Friedmann
Yoshitomo Nara @ Stephen Friedmann  Yoshitomo Nara @ Stephen Friedmann     Yoshitomo Nara @ Stephen Friedmann
Yoshitomo Nara @ Stephen Friedmann     Yoshitomo Nara @ Stephen Friedmann

In parallel to the show Yoshimoto Nara created a large scale billboard, visible from the Waterloo bridge, as part of a new project called the Waterloo Billboard Commissions by the Hayward Gallery where Nara exhibited back in 2009. The humorous, manga-influenced piece, titled Marching on the Butterbur Leaf, depicts a young girl playfully encouraging passers-by to fall in step.

Yoshitomo Nara @ Stephen Friedmann

View the full set of pics here

Yoshimoto Nara – New Works
Until 1st June 2016
Stephen Friedman Gallery
London

London: Charming Baker ‘Sweet Nothing’ @ S|2

Charming Baker - Sweet Nothing

Sotheby’s Contemporary art gallery in London. S|2, is currently showing an exhibition of new works by Charming Baker (covered) entitled ‘Sweet Nothing’, featuring canvasses and a series of studies on paper, and large scale drawings.

Known to purposefully damage his work by drilling, cutting and even shooting it, Baker intentionally puts into question the preciousness of art and the definition of its beauty, adding to the emotive charge of the work he produces.

Working towards his new exhibition Sweet Nothing, Charming Baker has described his overriding influences as “…Schrödinger’s cat, Pavlov’s dog, bitter nostalgia, sex, joy, folly, loss, Don Quixote, tended gardens, gypsum foundations, concrete ideals, loose morals, nature, nurture, sweet nothing…”

Charming Baker - Sweet Nothing Charming Baker - Sweet Nothing    Charming Baker - Sweet Nothing Charming Baker - Sweet Nothing    Charming Baker - Sweet NothingCharming Baker - Sweet Nothing
Charming Baker - Sweet Nothing  Charming Baker - Sweet Nothing  Charming Baker - Sweet Nothing
Charming Baker - Sweet Nothing   Charming Baker - Sweet Nothing
Charming Baker - Sweet Nothing   Charming Baker - Sweet Nothing
Charming Baker - Sweet Nothing
Charming Baker - Sweet Nothing

View the full set of pics here

Charming Baker
Sweet Nothing @ S|2
Until 29 May 2016
31 St. George Street
London W1S 2FJ

London: Andy Denzler @ Opera Gallery

Andy Denzler - Opera Gallery London

Swiss painter Andy Denzler is having his first London solo show at Opera Gallery.  Featuring a series oil canvasses and bronze sculptures, the exhibition “Between Here and There” explores the romantic idea of young urban creatives’ existence in the inner city life: a creative mind surrounded by the decay of buildings a search for identity within the fast paced world.

The artist weaves nostalgic photorealism with gestural expression in his style of painting. Through the use of intricate and detailed images, staggered by recurrent flowing  horizontal sweeps of the brush, Denzler’s works resemble at once a still from a paused film and a fuzzy dreamlike memory.

Andy Denzler - Opera Gallery LondonAndy Denzler - Opera Gallery London     Andy Denzler - Opera Gallery LondonAndy Denzler - Opera Gallery London     Andy Denzler - Opera Gallery London
Andy Denzler - Opera Gallery LondonAndy Denzler - Opera Gallery London     Andy Denzler - Opera Gallery London

Bronze sculptures represent life size urban individuals holding their cellphones or taking a selfie. With the decayed texture, they look suspended in time during their everyday actions.

Andy Denzler - Opera Gallery London
Andy Denzler - Opera Gallery London     Andy Denzler - Opera Gallery London
Andy Denzler - Opera Gallery LondonAndy Denzler - Opera Gallery

Andy Denzler – Between Here and There
Until 20 May 2016
Opera Gallery London
New Bond St. London

London: Warhol Icons @ Halcyon Gallery

Warhol Icons - Halcyon Gallery

A huge and comprehensive exhibit of Andy Warhol’s best work, Warhol Icons has opened at the Halcyon Gallery, narrating a layered social and cultural commentary from the mass consumerism society, music, politics to the celebrity culture.

Following a three years complex process the Halcyon Gallery has been gathering a significant collection from all over the world featuring over 100 pieces by collecting portfolios, key works and never-before-seen works.

Unique in its breadth, the exhibition spans over three floors and retraces Warhol’s career across three decades, from his early illustrative works of the 1950s through to the iconic works of the late 1980s. Creating a visual experience with an explosion of colours, forms and ideas, it gives viewers the opportunity to see original works on canvas, paper and some of his most important portfolios.

Warhol Icons - Halcyon Gallery Warhol Icons - Halcyon Gallery     Warhol Icons - Halcyon Gallery     Warhol Icons - Halcyon Gallery     Warhol Icons - Halcyon GalleryWarhol Icons - Halcyon Gallery

The mezzanine space in the gallery has been rearranged to display Campbell’s Soup I installation, as a tribute to Warhol’s first exhibition with Irving Blum in 1962, where his famous soup can paintings were displayed in the gallery to represent the supermarket shelves on which the soup cans were stored.

Warhol Icons - Halcyon Gallery
Warhol Icons - Halcyon Gallery   Warhol Icons - Halcyon Gallery  Warhol Icons - Halcyon Gallery

Five of the artist’s other famous portfolios from 10 have also been displayed including Cowboys and Indians and Endangered Species, looking at the nature of conservation and how Warhol viewed the environment – a lasting concern for the artist who frequently liked to bring these views into his works on the subject.

Warhol Icons - Halcyon GalleryWarhol Icons - Halcyon GalleryWarhol Icons - Halcyon Gallery

His classic 1981 signed Myths Invitations – with images of fantasy icons the Wicked Witch of the West, Santa Claus, Mammy from Gone with the Wind, Superman, Garbo, Uncle Sam, Mickey Mouse, Howdy Doodie, Boris Karloff – is one of many of his most recognisable pieces on show.

Warhol Icons - Halcyon Gallery

Warhol’s fascination with the celebrity is illustrated by his colourful portraits of Marilyn Monroe, Mick Jagger, Muhammad Ali, Ingrid Bergman or within one of his rare Self Portrait in Fright Wig.

Warhol Icons - Halcyon Gallery
Warhol Icons - Halcyon Gallery   Warhol Icons - Halcyon Gallery  Warhol Icons - Halcyon GalleryWarhol Icons - Halcyon Gallery

As visitors come, take photos to share on social media, Warhol’s legacy and celebration of ‘mass culture’ continue to show us his influence and relevance.

Warhol Icons - Halcyon Gallery    Warhol Icons - Halcyon Gallery Warhol Icons - Halcyon Gallery    Warhol Icons - Halcyon GalleryWarhol Icons - Halcyon Gallery

Such an extensive collection of Warhol’s iconic works has rarely been seen in one space. It’s a delight for art lovers, WARHOL ICONS is not to be missed at Halcyon Gallery.

View the full set of pics here

WARHOL ICONS
Until 26 June 2016
Halcyon Gallery
New Bond Street
London

London: D*Face Misprints & Misfits @ StolenSpace

D*Face - Misprints and Misfits

StolenSpace Gallery is hosting an exhibition called ‘Misprints & Misfits’, featuring a series of one off paper pieces by D*Face, from the deepest depths of D*Face’s print archives.

From the iconic ‘Dog Save the Queen’ to ‘Samo Butterfly effect’ and glittery ‘A Hole’, it’s a rare occasion to view unseen paper pieces, one offs, proofs, misprints and editions never before released. Hurry as the exhibition finishes on 1 May .

D*Face - Misprints and Misfits D*Face - Misprints and MisfitsD*Face - Misprints and MisfitsD*Face - Misprints and Misfits
D*Face - Misprints and Misfits     D*Face - Misprints and Misfits
D*Face - Misprints and Misfits     D*Face - Misprints and MisfitsD*Face - Misprints and MisfitsD*Face - Misprints and Misfits

D*Face Misprints & Misfits
Until 1st May 2016
Brick Lane , London