Showing posts with label blogs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blogs. Show all posts

Friday, 21 March 2014

John Craxton exhibition reviews: Blogs and the media

Source: Your Paintings BBC.  © estate of John Craxton 2013. All rights reserved, DACS photo credit: Bristol Museum and Art Gallery 



The John Craxton exhibition at the Fitzwilliam Museum (I recommended it here) has generated quite a few reviews! 

Here's my selection:

Reviews in personal blogs

Juliet Miller says:
"Craxton is an interesting painter who has not been very widely known."

One of her favourites:  Four Figures in a Mountain Landscape

"It evokes Greek mythology but is painted with a very English hand. [...] I wanted to be in this rough, rocky landscape myself or even live the life depicted."

Conclusion:

"If you are interested in British painters of the pre- and post war period this view into the internal world of a private yet exuberant painter is certainly worth the trip."



Joseph Scissorhands




Joseph Scissorhands says:

"I had seen two of his paintings at Tate Britain fairly recently and was curious to see more."

One of his favourites:  Four Figures in a Landscape

"which shows his [Craxton's] mastery of composition, line and tone."

Conclusion:

"I enjoyed this show as it was a bright blast of Mediterranean sunshine on a wintry Cambridge morning."


Chris Priestley




Chris Priestley says:

"I like the exhibitions at the Fitzwilliam.  They tend to be small and a little bit eclectic."

One of his favourites:  
"my favourite being a small picture - a tempera I think - of a goat."

Conclusion:
"I don't know what I make of John Craxton's work.  [...]  Some of his work I really like, but there is a lot I really don't like.  His influences are possibly too readable."


Source:  Your Paintings BBC. © estate of John Craxton 2013. All rights reserved, DACS
photo credit: Tate

Reviews in the national pres


 


Richard Dorment says:
 "John Craxton, who died in 2009, was the last Romantic. Or rather neo-Romantic."


One of his favourites:
Doesn't cite a favourite picture.  Still Life with Cat and Child does "amount to pastiche.


Conclusion:
"He wasn’t an artist of the first rank but he was inimitable. This show is just the right scale and it comes with a beautifully illustrated book  ... by his friend Ian Collins."








 
Andrew Lambirth says:
"[Craxton's] finest paintings lead the viewer into a visionary universe of colour and light and bounding structures, whose taut rhythms release a feeling of euphoria in the beholder and beguile the imagination with intimations of visual splendour."


One of  his favourites:  Landscape, Malevizi, Crete
"...the finest example I’ve seen in recent years is ‘Landscape, Malevizi, Crete’ (1952), a superb balance of pattern and description. A painting of that quality and joyous, seemingly effortless execution, a perfect blending of linearity and colour, is missing from the Fitzwilliam."


 
Conclusion:
"Craxton is actually quite a lot better than the sum of the Fitzwilliam show, which offers only a very partial view of this complex artist."













 
Michael Prodger says:
" 'A World of Private Mystery: John Craxton RA (1922-2009)', a small but choice exhibition at the Fitzwilliam, is an overview and reminder of the career of this unfashionably joyous painter."


One of his favourites:  
"One of his most unaffectedly pleasurable paintings is a colour-saturated image of three sailors eating a meal of prawns, squid, sardines and salad that is mouth-watering in every sense." 

 
Conclusion:
"A man of great charm, Craxton became friends with Patrick Leigh Fermor in Greece and it is through his drawings for the scholar-traveller’s dust jackets that he is now best known." 


Source:  Christie's.  John Craxton, Grey Goat.



Reviews in blogs and the national press: a comparison

• Blogs are less wordy.  Sentences are shorter.  Blog authors adapt their prose to the way reader quickly scan the screen.



• Blogs are more personal.  Blog authors state personal preferences.  They tell stories about how and why they visited the exhibition.  One author said their friend had wanted to see it; another commented on the weather.


•  Reviews for the national press  are longer.  They include quotations (from the artist or the artist's friends).  They name influences.  They offer stylistic categories ('neo-Romantic', 'Arcadian').


•  Reviewers for the national press  sometimes assert their own credentials and authority.  The reviewer for The Spectator, for example, explained that he had himself curated two exhibitions.  Perhaps they feel the need to do this because they are getting paid?


•  Reviews for the national press can be a bit pretentious and formalist.  Phrases like taut rhythms or colour-saturated don't tend to appear in blog reviews.


•  Reviewers for the national press make more of the artist's reputation and the question of artistic quality:  not an artist of the first rank or unfashionably joyous or quite a lot better than the sum of the Fitzwilliam show.



What type of review do you prefer?  Click on the little pencil below (where it says 'no comment' or 'comments') and leave a comment. 

Also: judge for yourself and visit the exhibition.  John Craxton, Fitzwilliam, ends 21 April.

Thursday, 13 December 2012

Four great blog posts to read

13 Dec 2013
1.  An interview with the artist @ Useless Beauty Designs






Susie blogs engagingly about sewing, knitting and crochet in Cambridge -- and sometimes about art as well.


The artist Heloise Toop (photo © Useless Beauty Designs)


A taster from her interview with Cambridge painter Heloise Toop:
'You have a distinctive, and clearly well-developed, style. Do you feel having developed something so effective and coherent relatively early on in your career restricts you or liberates you?
I am very flattered that you think my style is well-developed. I have never thought it was!   I struggle through a lot of paintings trying to find my way as I go, and to me, I'm still attempting and discovering new things all the time.'
Click here to read the rest:  Interview with Heloise Toop





2.  To touch or not to touch @ Yoga with Your Slippers On



Sally is a Cambridge yoga teacher and posts quirky thoughts about yoga, illustrated with her son's fun drawings.  Recently she branched out into art.





A taster of her post on touch:






'Many sculptures and objects made of bronze, bone, stone, wood, are clearly meant for contact and we ossify them, petrify them, betray them by separating them from human touch. We are insane to think that we can save them by this behaviour.' 


Click here to read the rest:  Touch!







3.  Stairwell art @ Sir Cam's Camdiary (Flickr photostream)


Sir Cam takes gorgeous photographs in and around Cambridge.  And sometimes they're photos of art.


Here's a thumbprint of a photo of an abstract painting  in the Faculty of English, University of Cambridge.

I really want to see this painting at the English Faculty now -- if only to read the artist's name on the bit of paper underneath!

A taster from the comments:
• 'gorgeous composition of lines and colors....'   
• 'I like the continuation of the line of the banister through the purple diamond on the painting, a very good composition. Grand job.'  
Click here to see the large version of this photo (© Sir Cam) and to read the rest of the comments.






4.  Natural wonders @ Joined-Up Pictures


In Mexico.  © Noel Myles.

This is Graham Dew's photography blog.  A few months ago he posted this wonderful review of a Cambridge exhibition (that ends on 20 December).

A taster: 
 'I spent a very enjoyable evening last Thursday at the [preview] of Noel Myles' new exhibition Paradise which has just opened at the Alison Richards Building on the Sidgwick site of Cambridge University. [...]  Perhaps the most fascinating thing about his pictures is the length of time you can be engaged in his still movies.'
Click here to read the rest:  Looking at still movies.






If you enjoy these posts, don't forget to leave a comment for their authors!


Would you like to recommend  any other interesting blogs on art and Cambridge?  Let me know in my own comments and spread the blog love.


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