Sunday, August 1, 2021

Tate Britain, 2021

We've visited the Tate Britain several times before, mostly for the Turners and the special exhibitions, which are always superb. I'd hoped to refer to previous posts and avoid going through the scores of pix I took this time, but, alas, my previous posts from the Tate are less than representative nor comprehensive. The most recent is 2016, when we toured with grand-daughter Penelope, https://roadeveron.blogspot.com/2016/09/tate-britain.html, and it is mostly about the Rex Whistler dining room murals, wonderful place, which is closed now. So here is a brief sampling of the earlier bits of British painting history at the Tate Britain.

Old entrance to the Tate Britain

But before getting to what you came here to see,
you have to process through a massive multi-media
installation, Heather Phillipson's Rupture No. 1:
blow-torching the bitten peach

The description here says it all...click to enlarge



Homage to Dali? Except they're not all Michelins
nor of the same size...

Phallic halo?

"We have lift-off!" Of course this all proceeds
through two or three large halls and is accompanied
by all kinds of sound, including, possibly, some music

Still from a video of a rising and setting peach (not bitten)

OK, right...take a deep breath...here, The Chomondaley Ladies,
1610, unknown artist...notable because they were twins, born 
the same day, married the same day, and giving birth to their
first offspring the same day...definitely worth so documenting

Nathaniel Bacon, Cookmaid with Still Life of Vegetables and
Fruit
, c. 1620

Peter Lely, Susanna and the Dirty Old Men, 1650

Thomas Gainsborough, Mr. and Mrs. Carter, 1747;
critics hypothesize that Mrs. Carter's representation
is perhaps a joke of some sort...maybe the one
about "gimme a little head"?

Evidently Canaletto wanted to be closer to his clients and so took
some time off from Venice to do the Thames, at Greenwich, 1750

Vicki studying the painting below; notice the place isn't
exactly packed

John Singleton Copley's The Death of Major Peirson, 1781; this
is from the battle for the defense of Jersey, which the French had
invaded (other Jersey)...sort of a Falklands thing?

There was a mini-exhibition on fairies in art, so Turner's Queen
Mab's Cave (references from Shakespeare, Shelley, et al.), 1846,
is on view

George Frederic Watts, Sic Transit, 1891; not funny

Charles Wellington Furse, Diana of the Uplands,
1903; the model was his wife, Katherine, who
also carved the frame; Vicki sat through a mini-
lecture on this; I played solitaire; turns out Furse
painted brown over his wife's gold frame; she
divorced him...


1 comment:

Tawana said...

So glad you were able to visit with few other visitors. Nice to view paintings without a crowd.