Showing posts with label jesus college. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jesus college. Show all posts

Tuesday, 12 October 2021

The three best shows of autumn 2021

 



What art to see in Cambridge this month:  My picks
(October 2021)


Sutapa Biswas at Kettle's Yard.  Wed-Sun 11-5. (free)


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Shahzia Sikander at Jesus College. Mon-Sun 10-6. (free)




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Magdalene Odundo at the Fitzwilliam Museum, Tues-Sat 10-5, Sun 12-5.  Online booking required (free).




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Bonus:

Gold of the Great Steppe at the Fitz. Online booking required (free).







Enjoy!
October 2021, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire












Thursday, 13 February 2014

How to look at a sculpture (in Jesus College)

Barry Flanagan's Cricketer (1989), Jesus College, Cambridge

Sculpture is three-dimensional.  So we need to look at it from three dimensions.

Walk around the sculpture.  Note how it changes.

07 Flanagan, The cricketer


Barry Flanagan's sculpture is quite dynamic.  It keeps changing as you walk around it.  Which is the main view?  I would pick the one above as it shows all four limbs, the snout and ears, and the full extent of the kicking leg.


03 Flanagan, The cricketer


03a Flanagan, The cricketer

04 Flanagan, The cricketer

This view shows you the curled pose of the arms.


05 Flanagan, The cricketer

And this one makes it look as if the hare is running, with ears flapping behind.

How does the sculpture relate to you?

Of all categories of art, sculptures are the closest to humans.  They stand upright, just as we humans do.  (And when they don't, it's quite dramatic.)

 We look at them, as if they were people or anthropomorphic beings.

Flanagan's hare rises above us on a three-legged support.  He balances one long foot on the horizontal pole.  The whole pose is about balance.

Because we have to gaze up at him from below, we don't look him in the eye.


01 Flanagan, The cricketer


Western sculptures often have supports.  They stand on plinths.  This goes back to ancient Greek sculpture.

A traditional plinth:



remembrance2
Robert Tait Mackenzie's war memorial, Hills Road (read about it in my blog post here)

A plinth lifts the sculpture from the realm of the everyday and real into the special realm of 'Art'.  It also elevates the sculpture way above our heads.


A radically plinth-less sculpture:

Antony Gormley, Earthbound Plant, Downing Site, Cambridge (read about it in my blog here)


We can't look Flanagan's hare in the eye but the camera can zoom up close and create a detail.

Notice the texture and reflections of the material.  Material is very important for sculpture.  The Cricketer is cast in bronze.  We see the joints of the plaster of the sculpture (before it was cast).  We see the lumps and uneven bits; we can almost imagine the sculptor's hands moulding and forming the material.

Bronze also reflects the light.  Flanagan has chosen not to polish this bronze to a high gleam so it's a bit matt.

If he weren't so high up, I'd knock the hare on his legs to see if he's hollow.


08 Flanagan, The cricketer detail


Here are some different materials:

Wood.  This reflects very little if not polished.  You can see the grain.  You can feel the rough surface texture.


Nash, David, Crack and Warp Column, Jesus Library
David Nash, Crack and Warp Column, oak, Jesus College Library, installed 2007 (not accessible to the public but see it through the window)

Glass.  This reflects light a lot. And the sky.  And the leaves.  It also reflects you when you peer at it.

Feel it:  cool and smooth.


Lane, Danny, Empress detail
Danny Lane, Empress (detail), layered glass, Jesus College grounds

Stone.  Stone can reflect light, if it's polished, and some stone, like marble, also has its own internal luminescence.  This statue is probably of Saint Radegund, patron saint of the mediaeval nunnery which forms the core of Jesus College.  This statue's stone is quite matt.

Look how the drapery creates a play of light and shadow that animates the figure. Sculpture always reckons with shadows.


Jesus St Radegund
Stone statue in a niche attached to a façade in Jesus College

Flanagan's Cricketer casts a distinctive silhouette shadow on the grass.

01 Flanagan, The cricketer

The lumps and lines on the bronze also create their own internal attached shadow play.  This changes, depending on the time of day and the weather.  (That's why it's great to look at outdoor sculpture.)

Take another look at the hare's right hand:  it's curled around a ball.  This must be a cricket ball.  After all, this sculpture is called Cricketer and it stands in the cricket grounds of Jesus College.

08 Flanagan, The cricketer detail

Is this a hare or some other beast?  I think it's a hare because hares were a preoccupation of Barry Flanagan's.

Barry Flanagan, Leaping Hare on Crescent and Bell, 1988, Broadgate, London (near Liverpool Street station)
Source:  Wikimedia; © Jim Linwood.

06 Flanagan, The cricketer


All my examples are taken from the sculpture collection of Jesus College.

What:  The Cricketer, 1989
Who:  By Welsh sculptor Barry Flanagan who sadly died in 2009.
Where:  Jesus College cricket ground, Jesus Lane

Thanks to all my Korean students from the Kaewon School of Art & Design who came to Cambridge for a Summer School of language and art history, and joined me on a visit to Jesus College.  And a special thanks to Mike O'Brien who kindly showed me round and told me the fascinating history of the college.

Permalink:  http://artincambridge.blogspot.com/2014/02/how-to-look-at-sculpture-in-jesus.html

Thursday, 29 August 2013

What's on in September 2013: Art in Cambridge





My top three tips for art in September:

1.  Open Cambridge
Fabulous opportunities to visit museums, colleges and other venues.

The highlights:

•  Architecture:  Sainsbury Laboratory, Bateman St (14 Sept)
Fantastic new architecture, not normally open to the public.  I blogged about it here and here.

 More architecture:  University of Cambridge Sports Centre, Charles Babbage Rd (13 Sept)
A tour led by the architects, Arup Associates.


 College:  Parker and Taylor Libraries, Corpus Christi College (13 Sept)
Take any opportunity you can find to sneak peeks into a college.  Normally, colleges close their doors to the general public or demand entrance fees.

 Stourbridge Fair at the Leper Chapel, Newmarket Rd
One of the oldest buildings in Cambridge (12th C., older than the university).  Not normally open but here's a chance to visit!  I'll be going primarily for the architecture but the re-enacted fair could be fun (Stourbridge Fair used to be the biggest fair in Europe -- I know, amazing).

When:  Fri-Sun 13-14 Sept 2013
Book here.  (It's free!)

Plus:  Bridge the Gap charity walk on Sun, 15 Sept.  Sign up, raise money, and see a whole ton of Cambridge colleges!





2.  Jesus College Sculpture exhibition

Last chance to visit Jesus College, its wonderful grounds (a former nunnery), its mediaeval chapel and its contemporary sculpture set among bushes and turrets.

Combine seeing the 'Sculpture in the Close' display (ends late Sept) and the permanent sculpture collection (not open to the public after Sept).



Ends:  22 Sept 2013
Where:  Jesus College, Jesus Lane




3.  Chloe Leaper at the Drawing Cube

People have been able to follow this project for a few weeks but it will be finished on 7 September.  I had a peek through the window:  mysterious scribbles all over the walls, controlled and geometric; also a delicate scaffolding of wood -- all very promising!





When:  7-15 Sept 2013
Where:  Drawing Cube, 9 Norfolk St (next to CB2)



Related posts:
What's on in August (a lot of this continues into September)




Saturday, 17 August 2013

Where to take family visitors: A Cambridge itinerary


meet the fockers


My parents are visiting next week.  They've been to Cambridge many times before so I'm not going to take them to King's College and other familiar sights.  Nor are we going to do a lot of walking as they are getting just a little elderly.


Here's a possible itinerary for when parents visit:




Day 1
Jesus College, sculpture exhibition.

Barry Flanagan, Bronze Horse, Jesus College

If people have enough energy:  pop in to All Saints' Church on the way out and look at the Pre-Raphaelite decorations and stained glass by Edward Burne-Jones, William Morris and Ford Madox Brown.

Possible coffee stop at Clown's on King Street.


Day 2
Drive out to Madingley Garden.
My mother loves gardens and this recent discovery of mine is top of my list for places to visit.

048 mad facade shoes
Madingley Garden

If we have enough stamina, we could stop by the American War Cemetery on the way back.

But we will probably head for coffee instead --  possibly at the West Café  in the Hauser Forum on the new West Site of Cambridge University.  I discovered the West Café last month and had a lovely lunch on the outside terrace, overlooking the fields.  Added bonus:  sciencey types with ipads at all the other tables.

25 DSCF8701
West Café, Hauser Forum

27 DSCF8687
The Barton bike path going past the Hauser Forum

Plus, if you're on a bike:  it's a lovely bike ride to get there via the West Cambridge bike path.




Day 3
Botanic Garden.
Did I mention that my mother loves gardens?  The Botanic Garden is one of her favourites, plus we now have the fantastic new Garden Café there.  Both my mother and father love modern architecture so the award-winning Sainsbury Lab is an added draw.

DSCF7736
Garden Café, Botanic Garden

DSCF7715
Garden Café umbrellas and bits of the Sainsbury Lab




Day 4
If people are up for it, we may take a drive down to near Stansted and go to the Henry Moore Sculpture Park in Perry Green.  I've not been there but it looks like a nice, doable outing from Cambridge.  Nature plus art:  a good combination.


Catalogue of the Henry Moore collection at Perry Green

Local alternative (in case people don't feel like travel):

Lynn Strover Art Gallery in Fen Ditton.  This has a Bank Holiday exhibition called The Little Picure Show from  Sat-Mon, 24-26 Aug 2013.

Source:  © Lynn Strover.






Day 5
I have to pick up another family member from Luton Airport in the morning so that will eat half the day.  Perhaps we will relax afterwards and have Cream Tea at the Orchard Tea Garden in Grantchester.

Gateway Gallery, Luton Airport

Orchard
Orchard Tea Garden in winter

Possible supper at Bill's on Green Street.





Day 6
A day to go punting.  Or just veg out.  Possibly finish with drinks on the roof terrace of the Varsity Hotel.

Although, if you want great views for free, just take the lift up to the top floor of the Park Street car park.  ;-p

Mural at the Newmarket Street roundabout




More ideas for a Cambridge itinerary are here at my pinterest site:  Visitors' itinerary.

Where do you take visitors?



Related blog posts:
Murals in a tunnel under a roundabout
Werewolf art at Luton Airport
Madingley series


Permalink:  http://artincambridge.blogspot.com/2013/08/where-to-take-family-visitors-cambridge.html

Saturday, 3 August 2013

What art to see in Cambridge in August 2013




What's on in Cambridge in August 2013

Open Studios are over.  What now?  Well, there are still many weeks of art in summer left.  Here are my top tips for what you might like to visit and see in August:







Do not miss this!  I've already been twice (and a blog post is waiting in the wings).  Not only do you get to see interesting sculpture but you also get to wander round the beautiful gardens and mediaeval cloister of Jesus College, plus sit in the cool chapel with its Pre-Raphaelite glass windows.  Normally, colleges cost money or close their doors to the public -- so take this opportunity to visit for free.  

Jesus College was a nunnery before it was a college (from the 13th century).  Academics unceremoniously turfed out the women in the late 16th century; women were not re-admitted (as students) until 1979.  The sculptures are still mostly by men but there is an intriguing table installation by Doris Salcedo in the chapel, and Cornelia Parker's funny Moon Landing in the Fellows' Garden.

And if you're a tourist in Cambridge this August, even if you only have one day here:  you will love this visit to Jesus College.  Pick up a free map at the Porter's Lodge.  The useful catalogue with map and info on all sculptures, the ones in the exhibition and the permanent collection, costs only £4.

My top tip for this summer!

Jesus College, Jesus Lane
11 am - 8 pm
Ends 22 Sept 2013






To my shame, I've still not visited this gallery in Fen Ditton.  It's the perfect outing for a warm summer's day:  cycling along the lovely river path to Stourbridge Commons, with art awaiting at the end.  I promise:  once I've been, I will post about it!  Until then, let me know if you've been and what you thought.


Lynn Strover Gallery
23 High Street, Fen Ditton, CB5 8ST
Thurs-Sat 11 am - 4 pm
Ends 10 Aug








If it gets too hot for you, cool off in the air-conditioned rooms of the Afro Comb exhibition.  I went last week and was surprised at the worlds opened up:  there's an amazing video of a woman at the hairdresser's in the 1940s and how her frizzy African hair was styled into a tight 1940s perm.  There are combs going back all the way to ancient Egypt but also plastic political combs like the one with the 'black power' fist above.  Don't miss the fascinating handwritten notes by Cambridge visitors:  one woman recalls how she had to start doing her own hair as there was no African hair stylist in Cambridge, and how this takes her 7 (!) hours.  Another man remembers his father's barber shop on Mill Road, the only one in the 1960s and 70s to have afro combs.

This is about more than hair:  it's a whole history of lives and politics.


Fitzwilliam Museum, Trumpington Rd
Tues - Sat 10 am - 5 pm, Sun and Bank Hol Mon 12 noon - 5 pm
Ends 3 Nov 2013






Another opportunity to visit a college for free and wander about its grounds.  Fitzwilliam has some very interesting modern architecture; my favourite is the spiky chapel with its glass window onto nature.

Exhibition
Chapel Crypt, Fitzwilliam College, Huntingdon Rd
9 am - 5 pm
Ends 11 Oct 2013







An exhibition of contemporary paintings in the East Asian tradition
With: Peter Cavalciuti, Edmund Kunji, Ann Massing, and Dominique Ruhlmann
David Sheppard Room, Trinity Hall's Wychfield Site, Storey's Way, CB3 0DZ
Sat-Sun 3-4 Aug and Sat-Sun 10-11 Aug 2013





Finally:
Various exhibitions and events throughout August 2013 (click on the link above for more info)

Includes:
Glass Cube Project, by Chloe Leaper at the Drawing Cube, Norfolk St (1 Aug-15 Sept 2013)
Romsey Mural Series, with Mr Penfold
Elizabeth Eade's beermats, prints and paintings at the Six Bells Pub, Covent Garden
and loads more


Enjoy these hot summer days!


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