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OXFORD EVENTS DIARY

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British Museum Exhibitions

Kingdom of Ife: sculptures from West Africa

The BP Special Exhibition

Fra Angelico to Leonardo: Italian Renaissance drawings

 

Affordable, Unique and Culture Chic
Affordable Art Fair,

Architectural Disorder
Event: Art exhibition

Sponsored by Santander

Additional support provided by The A.G.Leventis Foundation

Kingdom of Ife: sculptures from West Africa

4th March – 6th June 2010         Room 35           Admission Charge

Kingdom of Ife: sculptures from West Africa will tell the story of the legendary city of Ife (pronounced ee-feh) through some of the most refined and beautiful sculptures ever to be found in Africa. Ife is today regarded as the spiritual heartland of the Yoruba people living in Nigeria, the Republic of Benin and their many descendants around the world. The exhibition will feature nearly 100 superb pieces of Ife sculpture, most of which have never been seen in the UK before, and have been drawn almost entirely from the magnificent collections of the National Commission for Museums and Monuments, Nigeria. The British Museum is planning a series of Africa-related events, activities and displays to coincide with the 50th anniversary of African Independence celebrations in 2010.

 

Ife is rightly regarded as the birthplace of some of the highest achievements of African art and culture, combining technical accomplishment with strong aesthetic appeal. From the 12th to the 15th centuries, Ife flourished as a powerful, cosmopolitan and wealthy city-state in West Africa, in what is now modern Nigeria. It was an influential centre of trade connected to extensive local and long-distance trade networks which enabled the region to prosper. Ife developed a refined and highly naturalistic sculptural tradition in stone, terracotta, brass and copper-alloy to create a style unlike any in Africa at the time. The human figures portray a wide cross-section of Ife society and include depictions of youth and old age, health and disease, suffering and serenity. The almost pure copper mask of Obalufon II, an early Ooni (king) of Ife is one of the finest images of royal power from Ife.

 

According to Yoruba myth, Ife was the centre of the creation of the world and all mankind. Ife was home to many sacred groves located in the city’s forests. Two groves in particular have revealed numerous sculptures: the Ore Grove with its stone monoliths, human and animal figures and the Iwinrin Grove which is associated with terracotta heads and fragments from life-size figures.

 

Other sites have revealed spectacular pieces with royal associations including the only known complete king figure and an exquisite terracotta head, possibly portraying a queen both from Ita Yemoo. A terracotta elephant and a hippopotamus head lavishly adorned with beaded regalia come from the royal burial site of Lafogido.

 

The figurative terracotta sculptures, which represent the largest group of works, capture the diverse nature of Ife society at the time. Several terracotta heads bear facial striations suggesting cultural markings, some possibly from groups outside Ife. Some heads appear to depict women wearing regalia or jewellery indicating their high status. Also on display are almost life-size copper alloy heads which reveal an idealized, naturalistic uniformity although each head has notable individual characteristics. It is suggested that they were produced over a relatively short period of time, maybe in a single workshop. These heads are believed to be associated with the coronation or the accession rituals of new rulers of Yoruba city-states which owed allegiance to Ife.

For review see  IFE Review

 

Today Ife remains a major spiritual and religious centre for the Yoruba people. Some of its shrines and groves are still in use and rituals to key gods are performed regularly. Works of art from Ife have become iconic symbols of regional and national unity, and of pan-African identity. Since Independence in 1960 enthusiasm for copies or reproductions of heritage items with nostalgic associations has increased.  The ‘Ori Olokun’ head was chosen as the logo for the All-Africa Games held in Lagos in 1973 and has been adopted as the logo of numerous commercial, educational and financial institutions. Such images have become universal symbols of African heritage.

 

  

 

 22 April – 25 July 2010   

Round Reading Room       

Admission charge

This major exhibition, supported by BP, will bring together the finest group of Italian Renaissance drawings to be seen in this country for over seventy years. Drawn from the two foremost collections in the field, the Gabinetto Disegni e Stampe Uffizi in Florence and the British Museum, the display will chart the increasing importance of drawing during the period between 1400 and 1510, featuring 100 works by amongst others Fra Angelico, Jacopo and Gentile Bellini, Botticelli, Carpaccio, Leonardo da Vinci, Filippo Lippi, Mantegna, Michelangelo, Titian  and Verrocchio. In addition, infrared reflectography and other non-invasive scientific analysis of the works will give fresh insights into the techniques and creative thinking of Renaissance artists as they experimented with a freedom not always apparent in their finished works.

 

In 15th century Italy a fundamental shift took place in the use of preparatory drawings. The starting point of 1400 marks the beginning of the Renaissance, which saw the development of perspective, an increased interest in classical forms and a greater focus on naturalism. The exhibition closes with the early drawings by Raphael and Michelangelo, prior to their departure to Rome and the unfolding of the High Renaissance. It was during the 1400s  that artists began to make drawings as works of art in their own right, signifying the beginning of a wider appreciation of graphic works, which were beginning to be collected and preserved. This rising importance of drawing is evident in works such as Mantegna’s mordant allegory of human folly, the Virtus Combusta (Virtue in flames) or later examples of finished presentation drawings such Leonardo’s silverpoint Bust of a Warrior from the 1470s.

 

Nevertheless the majority of drawings in the exhibition are working studies, and as such were never intended to be seen outside the studio.  Drawings allowed artists to practice and refine designs for paintings.  It was during the 15th century that the stages of designing a painting from initial sketch to final design were worked out and this process remained in place until the modern age. Exploratory compositional studies were followed by detailed sketches of figures and important motifs, sometimes concluding with a same size drawing of the design known as cartoon.  The exhibition will include the first surviving study for a panel painting: Lorenzo Monaco’s study in the Uffizi of around 1407 for the left-wing of his Coronation of the Virgin altarpiece from the National Gallery, London. The drawing and the related panel will be brought together for the first time.

 

The influence of classical art and architecture was a key factor in the emergence of a new approach by painters, sculptors and architects. A move towards realism, the representation of man and nature  and the use of a linear perspective to create an illusion of the three dimensional form were the core elements of the Renaissance style, seen particularly in the album of finished drawings made by the Venetian painter Jacopo Bellini  and in the works of his artistic rival Pisanello.

 

The importance of Leonardo in this period is reflected in the inclusion of ten drawings by him, including his celebrated pen study of a sun baked panoramic landscape that he precisely dated, 5 August 1473.  This is the earliest landscape drawing in European art and the first documented work by Leonardo. The exhibition also examines how Leonardo’s extended stay in Milan affected the drawing style and practices of local artists, such as Boltraffio and Andrea Solario.  Leonardo’s fresh naturalism and his desire to push the boundaries of painting inspired the generation of Michelangelo and Raphael to achieve what he had sketched out on paper but rarely delivered in terms of finished paintings. 

 

The exhibition gives a broad overview of the development of drawing throughout Italy, but with a particular emphasis on Florence and Venice. Venetian artists tended to favour more atmospheric, tonal drawing compositions (Titian’s drawings in the exhibition provide an example) whilst Florentines tended to favour outline and emphatic volume (as seen on drawings by Verrocchio, Credi and Leonardo). Florentine drawing was characterised by the depiction of movement and the expression of emotion and states of mind by pose, gesture and drapery as seen in Verrochio’s Head of a woman and Leonardo’s Child with a cat. In Venice painting was very much a family business, dominated by the artistic dynasties of the Bellini and Vivarini families. For Venetian artists light and colour dominated their approach to drawing, hence the frequent use of veils of wash as seen in Carpaccio’s St Augustine in his study.

 

At the turn of the sixteenth century Raphael arrived in Florence. The groundwork of a dynamic and classically inspired style created by Michelangelo and Raphael in Papal Rome was established in Florence during the first decade of the 1500s. These artists took up and developed pre-existing Florentine artistic trends and took them onto a wider stage during the High Renaissance through works such as the studies of the Virgin and Child by Raphael and the Bruges Madonna studies by Michelangelo.

 

Fra Angelico to Leonardo will travel to the Uffizi in Florence after it closes in London on 25th July.

 

To book tickets please print

www.britishmuseum.org or

 020 7323 8181

 

For public information please print www.britishmuseum.org

or 020 7323 8299

 

 

 

14 – 16 May 2010 at the Passenger Shed, Temple Meads, Bristol

2009 saw the Affordable Art Fair (AAF) celebrate its tenth anniversary, and in the same stride the worldwide event broke the £100 million barrier on art sales. Between Friday 14 and Sunday 16 May 2010 Bristol gets another slice of the action when the fair returns to the Passenger Shed with a diverse new range of contemporary paintings, sculpture, photography and original prints priced between £50 and £3,000.

Like its sister events held in London, Paris, Amsterdam, Brussels, New York and affiliate fairs in Sydney and Melbourne, the Bristol fair proved very popular with locals last year, welcoming a record-breaking 6,500 visitors over the three-day period.

Visiting AAF is the perfect way to spend an afternoon with family and friends, and with the diversity and choice of art available, everyone is guaranteed to find something to suit their individual taste and budget. Enjoy perusing the pieces at your leisure in the informal and fun environment (even well-behaved dogs are welcome!), which attracts new and seasoned art buyers alike.

Put the Affordable Art Fair in your diary this year to find a unique work of art that you can treasure forever.
 

Saturday 6 – Saturday 27 March 2010

Location: OVADA, Gallery, Gloucester Green Bus Station, Oxford, OX1 2AQ

Cost: FREE and suitable for all audiences

Opening Times: Tuesday - Friday 10.00 am to 5.00pm, Saturdays 11am - 4pm, 6 – 27 March 2010. Closed Sunday and Monday

Artists: Lisa O'Brien, Chloe Brooks, Dori Deng & Meta Dracar, Lilah Fowler, David Garnett, Myfanwy Johns, David McDairmid, Chris Wright


Curated by: Launch Collaborative


Architectural Disorder is a group exhibition of site-specific, contemporary artworks by a selection of celebrated UK based, early career, and established artists. Curated by artist and curatorial collective, Launch Collaborative, the exhibition opens on Saturday 6 March in OVADA art gallery, Oxford, and continues until Saturday 27 March 2010.

The pending redevelopment and architectural alterations of OVADA art gallery in Oxford city centre yielded the conception of a group exhibition of works by artists who take their inspiration from architectural concepts, and notions of changing space in order to provide multiple ways for viewers to relate to, use, enjoy, and occupy space through varying levels of consciousness.

Architectural Disorder will be one of the last art exhibitions to take place in the OVADA art gallery before it closes its doors for the redevelopment of the Old Fire Station site.

Launch Collaborative’s work fills an otherwise unoccupied void in Oxford’s art scene by providing a much needed platform for creative exploration.

Attracted to the changing, transient nature of this prominent exhibition space Architectural Disorder will showcase works by some of the most exciting, early and mid career artist making work in the UK today.

Launch Collaborative’s goal is to provide exhibition opportunities for local artists, at the same time drawing other artists and audiences into the city.

Interested in social dynamics and the psychology of space, Launch Collaborative are keen to engage public interest in contemporary art, whilst remaining committed to artistic integrity; something that the collective have faced head on through the artistic interpretation the topical subject of the redevelopment of OVADA art gallery.

Recent Central Saint Martins graduates Dori Deng & Meta Dracar will perform at the private view of Architectural Disorder on the 5 March. Dori Deng & Meta Dracar explore the dimensions and proportions of space through the use of moving bodies, visuals and sound.

Bristol based Chloe Brooks transforms areas through apparently straightforward physical interventions - interferences into the architectural idiosyncrasies of a space. After careful examination Brooks makes a blunt interference in Architectural Disorder tipping the gallery space, quite literally, on its head!

Recently acquiring the accolade of Artist of The Month by the Scottish Arts Council (having been nominated by key curators, writers and artists from across the UK) Lisa O’Brien exhibits audio installation, Disturbance, as part of Architectural Disorder. O’Brien comments on her work,

"Because sound is time based or durational it is tied to space and therefore place. It is the indivisible aspect of time and place and their contribution to a precise conciousness which intrigues me. By juxtaposing sound and image, not always using matching field recordings and real time, I want to draw attention to temporality, to question realities, to take time to experience fleeting moments and their universal qualities.

London based Lilah Fowler graduated from the Royal College of Art in 2008. Currently exhibiting alongside established artists Gillian Wearing, Fiona Banner, Jim Lambie, Gavin Turk et al in an exhibition curated by Keith Coventry in Vegas Gallery, London. Lilah Fowler is certainly a bright young talent to watch! Fowler looks at the way in which pattern, form, and alternating perspectives can question our definition of reality; illusions that present an alternative vision could indicate other layers of space and time in our everyday, shared environment. Fowler's work in Architectural Disorder invites the viewer to navigate around and amongst her structures, and in doing so the viewer creates his own fresh compositions and snapshots of his surrounding environment.

Chris Wright uses photographic lights to highlight a place on the floor where nothing exists, in doing so creating a dialogue between space and place, between place and non-place, between real and artifice, presence and absence. Wright explores boundaries and liminal places, she comments,

"I frequently use light as a metonym for specific locations and use photography and video extensively both as a means of documentation and as a medium. The photographic evidence of the experience of space not only exposes its sense of identity but also pertains to the residues of existence that occur outside of the space."

Celebrated artist and lecturer in Fine Art at Oxford Brookes University, Myfanwy Johns creates geometric repeat and one-off surface patterns that envelop and define architectural structure. Her explorations into surface design include working with historic pattern, merged with her own work to create new interpretations of surface.

The following two artists are Oxford based. Slade graduate, David Garnett was very keen to exhibit as part of this exhibition as he works directly through the architecture of defunct and neglected spaces, engaging with the space through its past function and uncertain future. Reproducing architectural language and reversing architectural orientation Garnett creates suggestions of an uncertainty and questioning of a space’s status in Architectural Disorder.

A qualified architect, David McDairmid works with coloured thread, creating geometric forms that highlight the positive and negative architectural shapes that inform both internal and external space, creating a visual threshold that penetrates both spaces.

Modern Art Oxford Director, Michael Stanley commented:
“Launch Collaborative’s bold and innovative projects are providing a much welcome alternative... We hope that this will be the beginning of many similar projects that demonstrate the vitality of the visual arts in Oxford and the valuable contribution we collectively make to the vibrant cultural life of the City.”


For more information about Launch Collaborative visit www.launch collaborative.co.uk

 

 

 

 

 
 
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