Our pick of this week’s art events: 13 – 19 February
Our pick of this week’s art events: 13 – 19 February
RA Recommends
By Sarah Bolwell
Published 13 February 2015
From the scattered wild waters of Scotland to knick-knacks collected by artists.
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Lynda Benglis
The Hepworth Wakefield, until 1 July
Benglis’s career is too-often typified by her iconic work Centrefold (1974) in which she poses brazenly with a dildo, daringly staring directly into the lens. This major retrospective confidently exposes the creative diversity of this American artist, acknowledging but not dwelling on her feminist-icon status. Focusing on her significant sculptural output, the Hepworth show is a full-bodied fusion of materials, colours and forms. Benglis’s poured latex works energise the gallery floors – a playful ‘two-fingers-up’ to Carl Andre’s measured, industrial floor sculptures of the mid-sixties. The female body is an enduring inspiration for the American, although in the works post-Centrefold Benglis’s focus is on its formal qualities rather than as a vehicle for political conversation.
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Yinka Shonibare RA
The William Morris Gallery, until 7 June
Now synonymous with the bold batik fabrics of his ancestral home Nigeria, Shonibare’s art explores the legacy of British Imperialism. For this new photographic commission, Shonibare has invited residents of Waltham Forest to help recreate archive photographs of William Morris’s family. The presentation draws poignant parallels across the centuries between two significant craftsmen and two sets of North London residents respectively. I’ve also been lusting after his collection of bags, created in collaboration with House of Alistair available from the gift shop.
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Thomas Joshua Cooper: Scattered Waters: Sources Streams River
The Fleming Collection, 20 February – 11 April
The celebrated landscape photographer, traveller and tutor at Glasgow School of Art presents a compelling collection of milky, meticulously hand-printed photographs. Brimming with Romanticism, the black and white images simultaneously celebrate the beauty of the Scottish landscape and recognise human subservience to it. Made over the last thirty two years, this series is a passionately composed ode to the flowing waters of his adopted Scotland.
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Richard Long RA: The Spike Island Tapes
Alan Cristea, 20 February – 2 April
This show marks two firsts for the Royal Academician – his first solo show with Alan Cristea and his first foray into carborundum printmaking. Long applies a thick paste of pigment and PVA to his 4 x 8 foot aluminium plates, in a process reminiscent of his mud wall paintings. The seventeen resultant works on display are all named after songs or pieces music he likes. For a man whose practice is firmly rooted in the physical natural landscape, these indoor relief works still sing with an organic vitality.
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Magnificent Obsessions: The Artist as Collector
Barbican, until 25 May
A snooper’s paradise – this show boasts an impressive list of artists, past and present (including several Academicians) offering audiences a through-the-keyhole glance into their personal collections and obsessions. A particular highlight unveils the 1960s apartment of Hanne Darboven – the minimalist artist here displays maximal hoarder predispositions. Cabinets of curiosities overspill with trinkets and knick-knacks, from Hiroshi Sugimoto’s prosthetic eyeballs, to Edmund de Waal’s Netsuke, to Damian Hirst’s stuffed menagerie. Despite its compartmental framework, the show manages to retain an absorbing cohesion. The Barbican has constructed a treasure trove, which I fear may demand multiple visits.
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Sarah Bolwell (@sarah_bolwell) is a London-based arts journalist.