Saturday, 14 April 2007

going south

Spent a couple of days in Brighton last week and we headed for Hove Museum and Art Gallery which, if you haven't been there,is a good example of how to spend lottery money,some of it anyway.It has been restored with great care and presumably great expense to be a gallery mainly devoted to a Craft collection. I don't want to get into an art versus craft discussion but there is something deeply satisfying in seeing objects, that have have been made with painstaking skill and individuality, being imaginativly displayed .The temporary exhibition is Paper Cuts and includes, among some amazingly clever paper objects, a 7 minute animated film Shadow Procession by the South African William Kentridge which uses cut or torn paper sillouettes of an endless stream of people carrying their worldly goods plus objects such as gallows across the screen in the jerky manner of early film. It has an Ubu Roi figure in the second half looming out of the screen like a Goya colossus clearly delighted with the suffering he has created.The tradition of Hogarth, Goya and Daumier is alive and well.The croaky, nostalgic sounds of South African street musician Alfred Makalembe are played alongside and one might think whole thing thing might be using rather well worn cliches to rouse emotion, but the mixture of tragedy and burlesque works well especially if ,like me, you are watching alone in the small room in Hove.It made me want to discover more about this artist who was only known to me by his prints and drawings.In fact he is often quoted as an artist who was 'brave' enough to discover drawing again.You may have noticed that it was lost down the back of the sofa for many years. In other animations he draws each frame in charcoal and partly erases it so the traces remain .This resonates with stuff that I do so I intend to see more of his work.
Off to teach a course in Bath where we have not got quite enough people and I will report on that later.

2 comments:

Floral Post-it said...

Hello, i am an old pal of Meloney Lemons and she put me on to your blog via her own - just so you know how I found you. Anyway I juat want to share your enthusiasm for William Kentridge and tell you i think there is one of those Phaidon art books about him in the series on contemporary artists that can usually be found in fairly elitist, woops no i mean culturally horse flapped gallery bookshops anyway I expect theyve got it on Amazon. I saw some of his films about 10 years ago and have never forgotten them because of that scribbly chalky energy and because of their rampant political effectiveness.

rosemary catling said...

thanks for the comment floral post -it.when can we see your blog and your work? glad you like kentridge.