Over 100 works by the Canadian artist Emily Carr celebrate the verdant landscape of British Columbia.
Delicate and luminous, the first – ‘War Canoes, Alert Bay’, completed around 1908 – is a watercolour of a pair of traditional boats built by the First Nations Kwakwaka’wakw tribe. Also titled ‘War Canoes, Alert Bay’, the second painting depicts a pretty much identical scene. Except it’s twice the size and, ditching watercolour for oil paint, Carr has used every hot hue in her paint box to transform the scene into a blazing post-impressionist idyll. The difference is five years – and a stint in Paris.
These pictures, such as ‘Tanoo’ (1913), are revered in Canada. But were it just a tale of an intrepid young woman beefing up her studies of British Columbia with a borrowed, Frenchified painting style, this show would falter after its first few works. Instead Carr’s story is odder and more engrossing than that, and her art grows richer and stranger with it. There are long stretches of obscurity and poverty, during which she runs a boarding house, breeds Old English sheepdogs and doesn’t paint at all. When, in the late-1920s, she finally finds an audience for her work, she discovers that her methods and subjects no longer match her ambitions. So, while the first part of the exhibition is all accumulation (of knowledge, insight into other cultures) the second is about letting go – of her training and technical ability, along with the spiritual emblems of cultures not her own.
What she discovers as a result is her own kind of religion – an unmediated worship of nature, particularly the towering verticals of pines and firs.
SCIENCE MUSEUM: Drawn by light
The Royal Photographic Society Collection
The name "Drawn by Light" of the exhibition reflects the ‘artistic’ tack of a lot of early photography. This was drawing with light: a noble creative calling, whereby the treasures of the earth and the human soul might be delineated, analysed, catalogued. "A path to enlightenment" as Chris Waywell said.
A biggish chunk of this show is so astounding because it is the product of artists-turned-scientists, scientists-turned-artists, self-taught geniuses and pioneering visionaries who had more in common with brave/naïve Victorian explorers than with modern ideas of what a photographer might be, or do. It’s also the reason why quite a lot of the photos are blinking peculiar: strange, moving, other-worldly.
The name "Drawn by Light" of the exhibition reflects the ‘artistic’ tack of a lot of early photography. This was drawing with light: a noble creative calling, whereby the treasures of the earth and the human soul might be delineated, analysed, catalogued. "A path to enlightenment" as Chris Waywell said.
A biggish chunk of this show is so astounding because it is the product of artists-turned-scientists, scientists-turned-artists, self-taught geniuses and pioneering visionaries who had more in common with brave/naïve Victorian explorers than with modern ideas of what a photographer might be, or do. It’s also the reason why quite a lot of the photos are blinking peculiar: strange, moving, other-worldly.
LEIGHTON HOUSE: Juan Antonio Pérez Simón
For example, Lawrence Alma-Tadema’s ‘The Roses of Heliogabalus’– which hasn’t been seen in London for over a hundred years – explores a decadent Rome, a favourite subject of London society at the time. Beautifully deceptive, the explosion of rose petals isn’t just a decorative trope for a ceremonial celebration, though. Rather, it depicts a scene from the ‘Augustan History’, in which the young Roman emperor Heliogabalus attempts to suffocate his guests with an avalanche of potpourri.
If you’re good at holding your breath you’ll be able to enjoy this Victorian marvel without distraction, otherwise it could be a case of life imitating art: the room has been scented with a Jo Malone rose fragrance and it’s almost as overbearing as the petals in the painting.
As you move through the house, you travel along allegorical timelines from antiquity to Arthurian legend. There are distinct uses of light and rich colours that envelope the scenes. But it’s the use and abuse of the female form that stands out – from moments of utter despair as in John Melhuish Strudwick’s ‘Elaine’, to enchantment, as portrayed in John Waterhouse’s ‘The Crystal Ball’.
If you’re good at holding your breath you’ll be able to enjoy this Victorian marvel without distraction, otherwise it could be a case of life imitating art: the room has been scented with a Jo Malone rose fragrance and it’s almost as overbearing as the petals in the painting.
As you move through the house, you travel along allegorical timelines from antiquity to Arthurian legend. There are distinct uses of light and rich colours that envelope the scenes. But it’s the use and abuse of the female form that stands out – from moments of utter despair as in John Melhuish Strudwick’s ‘Elaine’, to enchantment, as portrayed in John Waterhouse’s ‘The Crystal Ball’.
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