In our latest podcast, Stuart Semple talks about his influences, seminal events in his life, how art can be a catalyst for social change and how art should be accessible to everyone.
Continue reading “Considering Art Podcast – Stuart Semple, artist and social activist”Considering Art Podcast – Michael Sandle, sculptor, painter and printmaker
In our latest podcast episode, British sculptor Michael Sandle talks about his life and his work including controversial views on contemporary art and his forthright expressions of disgust at hypocrisy.
Continue reading “Considering Art Podcast – Michael Sandle, sculptor, painter and printmaker”Considering Art Podcast – Liane Lang, sculptor, photographer and film maker
In this latest podcast, Bob Chaundy interviews Liane Lang who talks, among other things, about her innovative and subversive “interventions” in public statues.
Continue reading “Considering Art Podcast – Liane Lang, sculptor, photographer and film maker”Considering Art Podcast – Arabella Dorman, portrait painter and war artist
In this latest podcast episode, Bob Chaundy talks to Arabella Dorman, portrait painter and war artist.
Continue reading “Considering Art Podcast – Arabella Dorman, portrait painter and war artist”Considering Art Podcast – Helaine Blumenfeld, maestro of public sculpture
In this latest podcast episode, Bob Chaundy talks to American-born sculptor Helaine Blumenfeld about her life and the work that has earned her nearly 100 public commissions for public sculptures.
Continue reading “Considering Art Podcast – Helaine Blumenfeld, maestro of public sculpture”Helaine Blumenfeld – Looking Up
For the art lover frustrated by the closure of galleries and museums during these fraught virus-infected times, there exists some possible respite with a new socially distancing-friendly exhibition by that maestro of public sculpture, Helaine Blumenfeld.
Continue reading “Helaine Blumenfeld – Looking Up”Toma Stenko – How Love Feels
Every picture tells a story goes the saying. For Georgian artist Toma Stenko, narrative abounds in her paintings, driven by colour and figurative symbols. Her first London solo exhibition, as the title says, is about love in all its guises, seen from a female perspective. It’s not all sweetness and light since her works are intensely autobiographical, reflecting a fascinating but troubled childhood.
Continue reading “Toma Stenko – How Love Feels”Ishbel Myerscough – Grief, Longing and Love
There’s an underlying sense of sadness in this new exhibition by British portrait artist Ishbel Myerscough. Half way through preparing for the show, her mother died suddenly without warning. This followed the death two months earlier of her father-in-law.
There’s nothing like the death of a close parent to remind one of one’s own mortality but also to cherish what one has and holds. Grief, Longing and Love provides a series of intimate portraits of family and friends that captures stages in life’s journey from the innocence of youth through the experiences of motherhood to family bereavement.
Continue reading “Ishbel Myerscough – Grief, Longing and Love”Tom French – Transcend
The stark and arresting picture of the skull towards the left of the top picture is entitled Vessel. It forms the centrepiece of this new exhibition and faces you as you enter the Unit London gallery. It’s typical of what Tom French has earned a reputation for – monochrome works featuring an illusory quality. Recent circumstances have given such works an extra poignancy.
Continue reading “Tom French – Transcend”Photo50 – London Art Fair
Overlooking the 126 galleries exhibiting at this year’s London Art Fair is Photo50, the fair’s annual guest-curated show devoted to the most distinctive elements of current photographic practice. This year, the curator is writer and gallerist Laura Noble who has assembled 10 esteemed female photographers all over the age of 50.
Continue reading “Photo50 – London Art Fair”