Scott moved effortlessly between abstraction still-life and
figuration with equal confidence creating works of an international
standard. Born in 1913 in a career spanning six decades, Scott produced
an extraordinary body of work that has secured his reputation as one of
the leading forces in British painting from the 1950's right through
to the 1970's. Exhibiting in America and Europe from the early 1950s,
Scott is renowned for his powerful handling of paint, his exploration
of colour and the unstable boundaries between subjective form and
abstraction.Buy discount Mens Sports glasses online. This exhibition is the first major showing of the artist in the UK for over 20 years.
In
1953 whilst in New York William Scott met Mark Rothko, the first
British artist to do so. They became close friends and when Rothko came
to Britain in 1959 he stayed with William Scott's family in their
cottage in Somerset. Photographs taken by James Scott during this stay
and letters between William Scott and Mark Rothko held at the William
Scott foundation shed light on the profound influence Rothko had on
Scotts mature paintings.
To mark the achievements of this
internationally acclaimed modern painter, Tate St Ives, in association
with Hepworth Wakefield and Ulster Museum, Belfast, are showcasing an
important retrospective exhibition. Beginning at Tate St Ives 26
January with a series of thematic rooms the exhibition will evolve as
it travels to Hepworth Wakefield, before expanding into a survey
exhibition at Ulster Museum, Belfast. In collaboration with the William
Scott Estate, which is currently finalising a catalogue raisonné of the
artist’s paintings, the works will be drawn from major collections
across the UK and Ireland.
Working across the genres of still
life, landscape and the nude, Scott developed a unique language that
pushed the boundaries of abstraction and figuration, leaving an
influential legacy of work which mediates important developments in
mid-twentieth century European and American painting. His work is often
charged with a sensuality emanating from his dynamic compositions as
well as the vitality of his paint surfaces. Consequently the works have
an enduring human quality that continues to be as fresh and relevant
today as it was over fifty years ago.
The project is led by Sara
Matson, Curator at Tate St Ives with Chris Stephens, Lead Curator of
Modern British Art at Tate Britain, Frances Guy, Head of Exhibitions at
Hepworth Wakefield and Anne Stewart, Curator of Fine art at the Ulster
Museum.
A new book on William Scott by Sarah Whitfield will be
published by Tate to mark the centenary and exhibition. This will be
followed by a catalogue of the exhibition produced in collaboration
with the William Scott Foundation, encapsulating the tour, in its final
manifestation in Belfast.
For most of the five-hour trek, I’m
followed by stalker hawkers. That’s what I call them. Locals wearing
casual attire and flimsy slippers, and each hefting a heavy bag loaded
with bottled water, souvenir books, postcards, and T-shirts and hats
emblazoned with such mottos as: “It takes a great man to climb the
Great Wall.” n I try to ignore the first woman who matches my pace,
stopping, resting, slowing down and speeding up for great distances. I
hope she’ll tire — no chance. Then I hope that once I stop for lunch in
one of the myriad watchtowers, she’ll become bored and move on.
Instead, she pulls out her lunch box and sits nearby. Finally, I’m
resigned and end up buying a T-shirt.
By the time she and
several others over the course of the rigorous route follow and
eventually take leave of me, my backpack is stuffed with bottles of
water, half a dozen postcards and a couple of T-shirts. My take-away
lesson from hiking the Great Wall turns out to be one of patience and
acceptance.
My hike is a steep scramble on all fours,We have a wide range of Cycling sunglasses
and eyewear. up and down the dilapidated, narrow stone path where
weeds poke through and shrubs grow. The brick stairs that rise and fall
are loose or missing, with gaping holes in places. Even when they’re
functional, the risers stand a couple of feet high and can barely
accommodate the length of a human foot. Resorting to crawling becomes
the routine.
Whenever I stop — which is often — and gaze about,
the sweeping vistas resemble a virtual Chinese brush painting: misty
forested hills and lush valleys, and the ever-present serpentine wall,
dotted with towers, winding in both directions over the undulating
peaks. It’s these views that make the effort worth every step.
Following
China’s rugged Great Wall from Jinshanling to Simatai is like a test
of endurance at times. I’m either climbing up or down the symbolic
dragon’s back, carefully watching each step for fear that a misplaced
foot will mean falling into a hole or careening off the Great Wall
itself that perches over a precipitous landscape.
On this
eastward seven-some-mile trek, the first and last parts are restored
sections, where I can easily enter one of the multistoried watchtowers
and imagine the soldiers scanning the broad landscape, sending black
smoke signals or lighting fires to alert others to an impending attack.
Severing the alliance reflects the initiative of the museum’s
newly hired executive director, Malcolm Warner, who is pushing the
museum to add breadth to its California art focus by paying attention
to other nature-based art.
“We’re not turning our back on
celebrating landscape plein air painters; we want to open up to a
celebration of art that engages natures,” said Warner, who sketched out
a still evolving plan to replace the invitational with a conference or
festival that involves scientists, environmentalists and artists that
work with natural phenomenon. Hosting LPAPA’s fall invitational was “too
much effort in support of one genre,” said Warner, whose decision was
endorsed by the museum’s board on Jan. 8.
The museum, of
course, owes its founding to the town’s early Impressionist landscape
artists, such as Anna Hills and Edgar Payne. Even so, the Plein Air
Painters Association intends to carry on that legacy independently and
in a permanent venue that will display its members works, long-term
goals of the art organization founded in 1996 by local landscape
artists. Previously, the group held temporary exhibitions at various
galleries.
Carrying out the upcoming 15th invitational, where 40
painters from across the country are invited for a week-long
on-location painting competition, will be a challenge, said Greg Vail,
the group’s president. “I’m hoping supporters will help us,Firmoo
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he said, figuring catering, prize money, accounting, credit card
processing and other miscellany at about $160,000.We sell 100%
hand-painted oil paintings for sale
online. Previously, revenue from paintings sold at the contest was
divvied up, with most going to the artist and the remainder between
LPAPA and the museum, which provided support staff and the venue. “Now
we will be sharing equally with the artist,” said Vail, who was
promised use of the venue for the invitational without cost.
“It’s
an ideal solution for LPAPA; they’ve done something impossible up to
now,” said Jean Stern, executive director of the Irvine Museum,
referring to the organization’s lack of a physical home. Though the
event will lose some of its historical luster by decamping from its
ancestral home,View our range of over 200 different types of solar
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it continues to reinforce Laguna’s legacy as a city founded by
artists, said Stern, who served as judge of LPAPA’s last invitational, a
task he’s performed at similar events around the country.
“They
see a real strategic value in having Laguna’s cultural legacy in their
midst,” Vail said of the expected new owners of the 85-acre nine-hole
golf course and 62 aging suites. He described a hand-shake deal with
one of the principals involved in the pending transaction with Aliso
Creek Properties LLC, which also owns the nearby Montage resort. Joan
Gladstone, a spokeswoman for the owners, said she could not provide any
projection as to when the sale will close.
The principal, who
Vail declined to identify, described informal plans for updating and
expanding the venue’s meeting space. “There’s a strong business case for
doing this,” said Vail, who for two years previously worked for the
Inn’s current owners on a redevelopment plan that was ultimately
shelved.
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