Posts Tagged ‘London’

Henry Moore at the Tate Britain

In Tate Britain, Linbury Galleries, is a Henry Moore exhibition from 24 February till 8 August 2010. Supported by The Henry Moore Foundation Sponsored by British Land Company PLC, Finsbury and Goldman Sachs With additional support from Tate Patrons and The Henry Moore Exhibition Supporters Group. Radical, experimental and avant garde, Henry Moore (1898-1986) was one of Britain’s greatest artists. This major exhibition will re-assert his position at the forefront of progressive twentieth-century sculpture, bringing together the most comprehensive selection of his works for a generation. Henry Moore will present over 150 significant works including stone sculptures, wood carvings, bronzes and drawings.
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Van Gogh goes to London

Van Gogh painted himself

Van Gogh painted himself

The Royal Academy of Arts in London presents from January 23  2010 a major exhibition on Vincent van Gogh. It is the largest exhibition on the Dutch painter in Great Britain since 1968, reported the English art establishment Friday.
The Royal Academy of Arts shows ‘The real Van Gogh: the artist and his characters’ 65 paintings, thirty drawings and 35 letters of Van Gogh. Most of these letters the artist wrote to his brother Theo. The Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam offers from October 9 2009 an exhibition devoted to the letters, at the end of fifteen years research into the correspondence of the painter.

Turner and the masters

Turner self portrait

Turner self portrait

Turner and the Masters in the Tate Museum in London will present a selection of magnificent paintings by JMW Turner (1775-1851) alongside related works by the old masters and contemporaries he hoped to imitate, rival and surpass. Bringing together around one hundred works of supreme historical significance from collections around the world this will be the first exhibition to look at Turner’s work in the company of the greatest painters in the preceding history of western art. It will reveal his debts and rivalries in exciting, even unpredictable, ways, and explore his reputation as one of the greatest painters of landscape in the European tradition.
The exhibition will pair Turner’s works with major paintings by his predecessors, many brought together for the first time, including works by Canaletto, Claude, Cuyp, Poussin, Rembrandt, Rubens, Ruisdael, and van de Velde. There will also be pairings with paintings by Turner’s most important contemporaries such as Constable and Bonington. It will show how Turner’s responses to other artists were both acts of homage and a sophisticated form of art criticism, designed to demonstrate his understanding of great art and his ability to equal and even outshine the most celebrated exponents of the landscape tradition.

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