Our pick of this week’s art events: 23 – 30 April
Our pick of this week’s art events: 23 – 30 April
By Eleanor Mills
Published 24 April 2015
This week, RA Magazine travels to Oxford to take a look at a cluster of art events opening in the city, from the Ashmolean to the Bodleian Library.
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Love Bites: Caricatures by James Gillray and Great British Drawings
Ashmolean, Oxford, until 21 June and 31 August 2015
Marking the 200th anniversary of the death of the great caricaturist James Gillray, this show provides a snapshot of the political intrigues of the 18th century. The exhibition explores Gillray’s frequently published satires of important figures including the then Prime Minister William Pitt the Younger, King George IV and Napoleon, and also includes a superbly funny cartoon of contemporaneous French-English political relations.In the adjacent gallery is a much heftier show. Drawn from the astonishing 3,000-strong drawings collection the Ashmolean holds, Great British Drawings tracks the evolution of British draughtsmanship from the sixteenth century to now. The show includes work by past and present Academicians ranging from Joshua Reynolds to Walter Sickert and Tom Phillips, demonstrating where they lie in the broader context of British drawing, alongside masters including Samuel Palmer, David Bomberg, Graham Sutherland, Ben Nicholson, Gwen John and the still-prolific Frank Auerbach.
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John Bratby and Jean Cooke: Who is slaving at the Kitchen Sink?
Pembroke College Art Gallery, Oxford, 30 April – 12 June, open Wednesdays and Fridays 12–2pm
John Bratby RA and Jean Cooke RA were British ‘kitchen sink’ painters, borne of 1950s realism, depicting everyday people and their ordinary realities. But Cooke and Bratby’s realism was imbued with their tempestuous, often traumatic, married life – Cooke portraying Bratby as ever more monstrous, and Bratby painting Cooke in ever more unflattering ways. Cooke unfortunately suffered more from the relationship, and Bratby became more famous for his work.With strong works from Pembroke College’s collection, and key loans from the Royal Academy, this is one of the first exhibitions to place Cooke and Bratby side by side artistically and reappraise Cooke’s valuable painterly legacy. A must see.
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Debora Delmar Corp: Upward Mobility
Modern Art Oxford, Oxford, until 17 May 2015
Mexican artist Debora Delmar has made an ambitious new site-specific installation across the whole top floor of Modern Art Oxford, a work which surprisingly includes it’s own functioning juice bar. Delmar plays on themes of celebrity culture by using advert-like imagery, pre-made Ikea topiary (signifying the frivolous fakeness of the 1%) and that new emblem of fashion, juice – now the ‘super food’ of the rich and famous. Delmar explores globalized consumer culture with a suitably humourous take, even creating her own trading company, Debora Delmar Corp.
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Marks of Genius
Weston Library, Oxford, until 20 September 2015
This exhibition marks the opening of architects’ Jim Eyre and Chris Wilkinson RA’s masterful design for the Bodleian’s new library. Previously a shell of a building filled from floor to ceiling with shelves of books and not open to the public, the building has been converted by their firm Wilkinson Eyre into a marvellous multifunctional space with playful architectural language.The building has several functions, including private sound-proofed space for students, reading rooms, a café and an exhibition space where Marks of Genius is on show. By gum does this exhibition smack you around the face with the world’s most famous printed texts, which range from a 1217 version of the Magna Carta to the Gutenberg Bible, and the first folio edition of Shakespeare’s works to Mendelssohn’s score for Schilflied (Reed Song). With plenty of other blockbusters too, this is quite a show.
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Alchemy and the Laboratory
Museum of the History of Science, Oxford, Oxford, until 7 June 2015
To celebrate the restoration of a curious painting depicting a 17th century alchemical act (pictured), the Museum for the History of Science has put together a small but perfectly formed display on the history of alchemy, topped with a new commission by artistic collaborators Charles Ogilvie and Vid Simoniti.Alchemy and the Laboratory, on show in a room once used as an alchemical furnace, opens a window onto the fraught race the first alchemists embarked on to make gold. Including historic prints and a facsimile of the 1403-4 law passed against trying to make gold, the display ends with Ogilvie and Simoniti’s video work Dreams of Homunculi. Here antique texts and images of scientific vials come together to portray the alchemical concept that man could create a mini-man, or homunculus, from chemicals alone.
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Eleanor Mills (@slinkissimo) is Assistant Editor of RA Magazine.