art/architecture
Derek Jarman’s Prospect Cottage © Howard Sooley Happy news! After a period of great uncertainty about its future, Prospect Cottage, Derek Jarman’s Dungeness home, has been saved, following the Art Fund’s £3.5 million-fundraising campaign. A former fisherman’s hut, Prospect Cottage was purchased by visionary Jarman in 1986, the same year in which he was … Continue readings
Tags : Art Fund, crowdfunding, Derek Jarman, Dungeness, Prospect Cottage saved, Prospect House
St Derek of Dungeness (1991). Image © Ed Sykes ‘Friends of Derek’, the latest exhibition at Norman Road’s Lucy Bell Gallery, is a joyous celebration of the filmmaker, artist and activist Derek Jarman, writes A. Vasudevan. Featuring predominantly unseen images by friends and fellow filmmakers, the show supports the Art Fund’s campaign to … Continue readings
Tags : Art Fund, British cultural icons, crowdfunding, Derek Jarman, Dungeness, Prospect Cottage, The Garden
Performance room, featuring Marcelle van Caillie’s work © Morokoth Fournier de Carots The arts are littered with beautiful works based on lost love letters. The House of Marcelle, Explore the Arch’s latest offering, joins them, drawing on the missives of Marcelle van Caillie and lover-later-husband Henry Sanford. A multi-sensory work, it brings the … Continue readings
Tags : domestic theatre space, Explore the Arch, Henry Sanford, intimate theatre, Marcelle van Caillie, Marcelle van Caillie art, Marcelle van Caillie letters, migrant experience, Strindberg, The House of Marcelle
Early summer at the Jerwood Gallery sees it hosting a major retrospective of the work of renowned Anglo–German artist Paul Feiler, the first since his death in 2013. Spanning sixty years of work, the exhibition includes figurative pieces from the 1940s, abstracts from the 1950s and 1960s and Feiler’s more geometric work and perspex … Continue readings
In March 2017, on a visit to Venice, artist Kate Gritton found herself wandering the corridors of the Jewish Museum. Turning a corner, she came face-to-face with a photograph of a group of people, one the spitting image of her father. The exhibition featured British soldiers in World War II during liberation, but as … Continue readings
ARTIST, STORYTELLER, FEMINIST, WOMEN’S ACTIVIST, wife, mother, Dame, the labels are many and varied for Paula Rego. The Boy Who Loved the Sea and Other Stories, Rego’s first major UK exhibition in 10 years, opened at the Jerwood Gallery in October 2017. The show’s title comes from a short story by Portuguese writer Hélia … Continue readings
PIER OF THE YEAR AND NOW the prestigious Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) Stirling Award 2017 – the accolades just keep coming for Hastings Pier. A community-led project, designed and restored by London-based architects dRMM (Alex de Rijke, Philip Marsh and Sadie Morgan), the pier is, in RIBA president Ben Derbyshire’s words, a … Continue readings
The Exbury Egg is a thing of beauty and, after a somewhat epic journey along Britain’s highways, byways and waterways, it has come to rest in the courtyard outside the Jerwood Gallery. Artist Stephen Turner, whose work often challenges the relationship between natural and human-constructed environments, says, ‘an egg is crucial as a way … Continue readings
IN THE LIGHT OF SURREALISM #2 and INVERSE REFLECTION, the two exhibitions opening at the Arts Forum this week, draw, consciously or unconsciously, on tenets of surrealism. One of the most influential cultural movements of the twentieth century, surrealism continues to inspire artists today. But what does it mean? ‘I think the word is … Continue readings
Each picture told a story; mysterious often to my undeveloped understanding and imperfect feelings, yet ever profoundly interesting.” – Jane Eyre WHAT IS IT ABOUT JANE EYRE? What makes the book and, indeed, Jane herself so beloved by so many people? Certainly, the themes of love (bordering almost on obsession), madness, abuse and … Continue readings
‘I DON’T WANT TO PRODUCE WORK that is a pleasant distraction, then you move on to something else. I would actually like it to … stop their day. To make it an encounter,’ comments artist Marcus Harvey. And, without a doubt, that’s what his art has done since Myra (1995), his portrait of Myra … Continue readings
Tags : Allce in Wonderland, art, art symbolism, Brexit, Britishness, Churchill, contemporary art, exhibitions, Hastings, humour in art, Inselaffe, island monkey, Jerwood Gallery, Maggie Thatcher, Marcus Harvey, Margaret Thatcher, Monty Python, political art, RA, Sensations, social art, YBAs, Young British Artists