When the fighting has moved on...
There are many brave, inventive, photographers of war. But few capture the pathos, the suffering and the quiet dignity of the victims as well as Ivor Prickett.
Read more: https://www.theneweuropean.co.uk/no-home-from-war-images-of-conflict-survival-and-loss/
One for the Home Secretary
This exhibition at the Fitzwilliam, Cambridge, was not at all what I expected.
Less is more
I first came across the Italian artist Giorgio Morandi in a gallery on an island near Stockholm, artfully called the Artepeligo. He was teamed with actual potteries by Edmund de Waal and the result was quietly breathtaking. Here he is by himself.
The violence behind the quiet
I meet many impressive people in the world of arts but Anne de Henning is right up there for sheer bravado - not to mention talent. Read all about her: https://www.theneweuropean.co.uk/the-woman-who-shot-war/
Lost and found in Lithuania
I had never been to Lithuania and knew little about its art scene. It ranges from the ethereal to the decidedly gritty via the bold and radical Henrikas Natalevičius, MK Čiurlionis, Dorothy Bohm, Rimaldas Vikšraitis. And much, much more.
Read:
https://www.theneweuropean.co.uk/revealing-the-lost-art-of-lithuania/
Well, did they?
The terrific Newlands Gallery in Petworth, Sussex, has a collection of photographs and paintings tracing the relationship of the incomparable Lee miller and the nonpareil that was Picasso. Were they lovers? We’ll never know.
Mornings have broken
I sit next to Paul Raftery at Fratton Park, home to the ever-disappointing Portsmouth FC. In the many longueurs of a game we talk photography. This is his latest very classy exhibition.
See more: https://www.theneweuropean.co.uk/behind-the-curtain-a-new-dawn/
Mr Turner uncovered
My view of the artist Turner’s love life was clouded by his unlovely portrayal in the Mike Leigh film, Mr Turner. The truth is more nuanced and harder to identify.
Better late than never
Visited Bruges in Belgium a few years ago. Delightful. But surprised to find a museum dedicated to Frank Brangwyn - a man of parts if ever there there was. Doesn’t get the approbation he deserves but does have an exhibition of one of his major projects at the Ditching Gallery in deepest Sussex.
War made absurd
Few cartoonists are more English than Heath Robinson. So very Dads Army, so PG Wodehouse. Yet unlike them his gentle satire had a sting. A sting which more aggressive cartoonists would recognise as being on the side of finding the truth. Read more:
A place to swear by
Procida, an island in the Bay of Naples is a joy. Spared the worst of the crowds which flock to Ischia, Capri and Sorrento it has a clear sense of its identity. It relies on fishing - as the fabulous sea food testifies - and maritime work for its income and on tourism. Actually, the people there told me on a number of occasions that they don’t want too many tourists which makes their bid to become Italy’s Capital of Culture hard to understand. Anyway, the headline in The New European says it all.
The picture shows the view from the old prison high on a bluff above the two main ports. I wondered if the blue skies and inviting seas cheered the inmates or made them even more frustrated and depressed.
PS I don’t write the headlines!
Doomed to be too beautiful
I spent the best part of three months in Venice some years ago. How little has changed - superficially at least - and how much transformed for the worst. Read more:
Zen and the art of a painting a picture.
Pull 'em down. Keep them up. Think again
This piece should have appeared in The New European a month ago but, well, who knows why, it didn’t appear. Timely though. Always will be.
Every generation has to have its heroes. Military leaders, explorers, politicians. Mostly men and men of action at that. A few poets and writers are allowed to perch on a plinth. The occasional sporting hero. In fact, David Beckham was suggested as an appropriate candidate for the empty fourth plinth in Trafalgar Square.
From ancient Egypt, the Mayans, Greeks and Romans, statues, monuments, stelae and triumphal arches have been raised for the populace to admire. The Victorians could hardly see a street corner or some public edifice without sticking up a memorial to a national hero or local worthy.
There they stood for decades, invariably unchallenged, until now when there is hardly a statue in the western world which is not under scrutiny. Pull down and destroy those with a shameful past? Hide away in a museum basement? Leave upright - with a note of explanation tacked to its plinth?
Boris Johnson insisted that removing statues of controversial figures was to lie about our history after the statue of Winston Churchill on Parliament Square was daubed by Black Lives Matters protesters but historian David Olusoga, on the other hand, argues that it is ‘palpable nonsense’ to say that their removal somehow impoverishes history. Indeed, failure to get rid of them is a validation of people who did ‘terrible things'.
Sometimes it’s an easy decision. No one would defend the obliteration of all traces to do with Jimmy Savile. But when activists vandalised the statue Prospero and Ariel by paedophile and dog lover Eric Gill which stands outside Broadcasting House, the BBC did not agree it should be removed with some art critics arguing that Gill’s artistic genius trumps his failings as a human.
That’s where the problem lies. Standards, morality, what is wrong and what is right, have changed so much over the centuries - and will continue to evolve - that the only person who could have a statue without fear of naming and shaming 100 years from today is the late Barry Cryer.
So what to make of it all? In Testament, a small, but congested exhibition at Goldsmiths Centre for Contemporary Art in South, London, several contemporary artists are having a go.
According to the booklet which accompanies the exhibition - and helpfully tracks the works around the walls - the artists were invited to consider what is at stake in tearing down and erecting monuments.
‘Are they (monuments) defunct, illusory statements of permanence, continuity, and manifestations of power? Whose narratives do they preserve, and whose do they suppress? Can they still play a vital role in mediating communal grief and providing a locus for memory? Is there space for them to be re-envisioned?’
Several important names have contributed to the debate using sketches, installations, sculptures, paintings and films such as Phyllida Barlow, Ryan Gander, recently made a Royal Academician, Roger Hiorns, and Turner Prize winners Jeremy Deller, Laure Prouvost, Mark Wallinger and Oscar Murillo.
Do they meet the criteria set out in the exhibition guide and meet the challenge directly? Not really. But the subjects they choose and the style they use to express them are often implicitly answers in themselves.
First off; there are no statues to individuals. No personality cult here. Instead causes and concerns are featured such as migration, racial awareness and the environment. One or two address man’s inhumanity to man and political corruption. Surprisingly, there are no references to the predicaments of the LGBT community which so preoccupies much of contemporary cultural debate.
Jay Tan’s suggestion is a giant cake. In Sojourners Settlers Sponge she celebrates the Chinese immigrants who settled in East London at the turn of the 20th century with a maquette of a cake extravagantly decked with ribbons, fake flowers, bangles and sweet wrappers. She wants to see a full sized version in the middle of Limehouse where the first Chinatown was born.
Well, it could be fun, though any number of weight-watching protest groups will rally against such an unhealthy symbol.
On the other hand Rabiya Choudhry combines fun with practicality in The Lost Ones, a 14ft candle gaudily decorated with candy-coloured stripes and a beaming candle atop. She explains that it is a testament to all the people that have lost loved ones or feel lost in the world but also for women like herself who feel unsafe walking through streets at night. The lamps will guide them home.
The failings of capitalism are targeted by Tenant of Culture, aka Dutch artist Hendrickje Schimmel, who highlights the waste and poor working conditions which blight much of our consumer society. His Untitled (monument for Oxford Circus) is a proposal for a patchwork, 30 metres high by ten wide, of used trainers which he envisages being hung from a building in Oxford Circus where they will take 200 years to decompose as a mouldy, smelly, eyesore.
Rather than one symbol to aggrandise an individual Oscar Murillo has assembled plastic garden chairs, and loaded them up with lumps of bread made of corn and clay to create Collective conscience. The chairs evoke community and family gatherings, a spirit which he argues has been lost along with their working classes
With typical look-at-me bravura Monster Chetwynd has come up with A Monument to the Unstuffy and Anti-Bureaucratic, a vast comic-cut monster with gaping teeth made of latex, foam and paper. It’s meant to be a monument to ‘authenticity... Radical laughter and nonsense and spontaneity.’ It seemed to have worked in that respect - two children happily played in the creature’s mouth.
Ghislaine Leung has made an inflatable pub. It’s amusing but what else? Does it meet the dictionary definition of the word testament which gives the exhibition its title: Something that serves as a sign or evidence of a specified fact, event, or quality? It was created in 2021 so maybe it is a monument to all the days we couldn’t go to locked down pubs but does it challenge the relevance of statues as posited in the exhibition’s statement of intent?
Like Chetwynd, probably not.
What does challenge our perception and what it could or should represent is a brutal work by Phyllida Barlow - Untitled: hostage; 2022. It doesn’t seem much more than two chunks of wood supporting what looks like an upturned plastic bag.
You have to read the transcript alongside. It recalls a conversation taking place between a film maker, Barlow and an Iranian student while they watch an horrific account of a woman being stoned for her adultery in Iran. The victim is shrouded, wrapped and tied up and pushed into a hole when the crowd is commanded to stone her.
By the end it is almost impossible to identify her body from that heap of mangled, bloodied rags.
Look again at the sculpture. The two pieces of wood are blood-stained stumps of legs. The plastic bag becomes a shroud to hide her battered head. A football takes the place of her battered head, adding a grotesque horror to the scene.
It is hard to imagine this set high on a plinth as a testament to such evil. Perhaps it should be.
While many of the offerings on display take the form of a physical entity - like the statues so loved by the Victorians - as might be expected the stone and bronze of tradition is often replaced by the video and installation of the 21st century.
Adham Faramawy has made an engaging video A proposal for a parakeet’s garden using the birds as symbols of migrants, often displaced by colonial forces, arriving in a country where they are not universally welcome - just like the influx of the birds in recent years which many claim is affecting the local avine population. ‘Wherever they fly, let them come,’ runs the commentary.
Just as appealing visually, just as serious, is Scott King’s Total Floralisation (zone: 023), which argues that covering streets in flowers and plants not only helps the environment but makes hitherto run down streets places of beauty which people would actually want to visit. But more, such efflorescence would help fight poverty as visitors are attracted to such an attractive spot, shops would flourish once again and cafés prosper.
These are understated works, pleasing to the eye and quietly forceful, which cannot be said for Dominic Watson’s strikingly vulgar work England, Their England. Made of papier maché, with added water pumps and wine, it is inspired by the satirical suggestion that each prime minister has to undergo colonic irrigation when he leaves office to purge himself of the misdemeanours committed when in power. He portrays the enema being enthusiastically expelled by the Flusher and willingly lapped up by an eager John Bull character, the Flushee.
It’s crudely funny - disgusting, in fact - but Watson is angry: ‘Democracy at this moment in time presents itself to us in the form of an Eton education and well-cut accent, but that’s not how it feels. It stinks. It’s rancid, it’s insidious. I want the monument to subvert that and evoke a sense of disgust.’
(He had in mind an earlier old Etonian Prime Minister but it’s hard to assume he would not include the present incumbent as worthy of that assessment).
Should he want to plonk his work on a plinth, there is one to hand in the exhibition. Olu Ogunnaike has made a maquette I’d rather stand which is a copy of Trafalgar Square’s empty fourth plinth made of unused, rubbishy, bits of wood veneer collected from dusty factory floors and reworked to cover ‘one of the few monuments that are seemingly dedicated to nothing.’
Given that the other three plinths are occupied by such titans of British history as the notoriously dissolute King George lV and two Victorian generals, one who fought in the disastrous Afghan War and another who laid waste great tracts of India, this could be just the spot to dedicate to Flusher and his obliging Flushee .
Magnificence, misery and mischief
Our appetites for travel were sharpened by the years of lockdown because we could not go anywhere. In the 18th and 19th centuries the wealthy - invariably the wealthy - wandered elegantly around Europe, occasionally hindered by plagues, sometimes by war and even an exploding volcano.
They cannot stop us
It seemed somehow incongruous to run this piece without mentioning the small matter of the war on Europe’s borders, especially as the thousands of Ukrainians are making their melancholy way towards the west.
But the problem of the refugee still remains around the world and the iconography of the wall remains as potent as ever.
This is the piece the European published. Read here:
This is a companion piece they did not find room for. Berlin Voids by photographer Paul Raftery.
While Rafał Milach used the symbolism of chunks of the wall the wall to investigate its legacy English photographer Paul Raftery went for a walk.
In Berlin Voids, a series of images taken for an exhibition in 2014, he found that many traces of the wall in the city centre had been built over, such as in Potsdamer Platz with its underground station and Ritz Carlton Hotel. The further he wandered from the centre he discovered how the death strip had become a place for relaxation and sport where horses grazed, sunbathers dozed and walkers followed a well trodden path to a lake where before they would be shot if they went close.
What he found on a return visit this summer for a book project was that the land grab in the centre had intensified in areas such as Kreuzberg where real estate values have become too inviting to resist and buildings such as the vast black and glass offices of Axel Springer's German media empire bestride the course of the wall.
The use of the death strip as a place for leisure has also increased. In the spirit of New York’s urban walkway, the Highline, a riverside walk in the centre follows the curve of the river which had once been cut off by the wall and further afield he encountered Berliners on walks through forests where thousands of silver birches have been planted and whizzing along on electric bike tours, tending bees and taking up hobbies such as training falcons.
Raftery only revisited one scene; two blocks of flats side by side. It was obvious in 2014 that the house on the right had been in the East, shabby, boarded up and with rusting balconies. Now it is so smart it even boasts a trendy wine bar while its neighbour in the West is the scruffy one, disfigured by graffiti. The strip of land between them remains the same.
As for legacy, although many of the voids have been filled, the ghost of the wall lingers.
“I think Berlin has difficulty in dealing with its monuments because everything is laden with their 20th century history,” says Raftery. “They don’t want to rehabilitate everything and they don’t want to destroy everything because that would lead to all sorts of accusations, so they just let things disintegrate
“So the solution is to be pragmatic; ‘let’s not formalise too much, let some relics of the past disintegrate but use the places that are open as a resource for the city.’”
Strife between islands - or oceans apart
I’ve always been drawn to the West Indies - not for the sun or the cricket team ( though they are both major attractions) but because I was born in Jamiaca. It’s a flimsy relationship, I admit, but I was pleased - amazed - that my first home up in the Blue Mountains above Kingston is still there. The exhibition Life Between Islands is an, often bitter, portrayal of the fate of the Caribbean immigrants who came over on the Windrush in the 50s and 60s. Terrific painting, demanding videos. Read more
Hell of a show
Extraordinary exhibition at the Soane’s Museum of the imaginings of Pablo Bronstein. There’s a method in the madness.
Knock, knock, are there any artists there?
One of the odder shows of the year but one of the most intriguing - the world and works of the spiritualist artist.