[london] smog

3 exhibitions and 1/2

March 11, 2008 · 1 Comment

laughing different language Rodchenko HaywardOne and two: both at the Hayward Gallery (possibly my favorite gallery in London), the retrospective on Russian photographer Alexander Rodchenko and the group exhibition Laughing in a foreign language are diametrically (and dramatically) different. But this is good. The only downside (for the ones that wish to visit just one of the two) is that there is a cumulative ticket, so you’ll have to see the contemporary show even if you intended to see only Rodchenko. Personally, I was glad to visit both, and did laugh going through the ground and first floor galleries. Before heading to the Hayward I read some pretty harsh reviews on Laughing in a different…, but I thought 80% of the works were quite good. The display includes works by Nedko Solakov (best in the show), David Shrigley (a whole wall dedicated to his drawings!), Barthélémy Toguo, Doug Fishbone and Ugo Rondinone. It would be interesting to make a survey on how people react to certain pieces on show, if being foreign (in Britain) influences their perception. Apart from a couple of pieces I couldn’t see anything that would justify the shocked reactions of journalists from Time Out and Daily Telegraph. The Rodchenko display is very traditional, but interesting all the same and definitely worth seeing. Although I’m not an expert, some photographs (modern re-prints) seemed a bit poor quality. What I liked best was a wall of magazine covers designed around Rodchenko’s pictures.

[imgs via southbankcentre.co.uk]

Doig Tate Britain Doig Tate Britain 2 Three: Peter Doig at Tate Britain. I liked it immensely. No, I’m not writing anything new, Doig is one of the best artists around. He could be a Russian expressionist (early Kandinsky) or a French post-impressionist (Gauguin, and not only because of his recent move to Trinidad). Anyway a must-see.

[imgs via tate.org.uk]

1/2: Martian Museum of Terrestrial Art at Barbican. The mission of this exhibition is ‘to interpret and understand contemporary art’, but I’m not so sure about the outcome. It’s a bit of everything thrown in together, definitely not helpful if one wants to understand contemporary art. I really liked the work Cultural Ties (1979) by American artist Jeffrey Vallance. That’s about it.

Categories: Visual arts
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1 response so far ↓

  • maud // March 11, 2008 at 9:15 pm | Reply

    ehmmmm, do you know how much I’m nuts? In my post I wrote Degas instead of Gauguin, and I realized this whilst I was reading yours… oh my god, need to rest and it’s just tuesday…

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