Tag: #London

Returning to exhibitions: “Late Klee” at David Zwirner London

After almost four months of lockdown, I decided the time has come to take my bike and ride into London to visit a gallery. Only a few commercial galleries re-opened since 15th June, and many of them welcome visitors by appointment only. I booked the grand event at David Zwirner to visit Late Klee” (open until 31st July 2020), a display of sketches and paintings made by the German artist Paul Klee (1879-1940) between 1930 and 1940.

Because of the political and economic uncertainty coming from BREXIT and the pandemic, I have been looking at history frequently. This also determined my choice to see Klee’s exhibition, whose oeuvre I remember from the years spent studying fine art in Venice. When I think of Klee’s work, my mind goes back to prof Riccardo Caldura’s classes in which he explained the significance of displaying a small oil-transfer Klee made in 1920, “Angelus Novus”, at Documenta XII (Kassel, 2005). The history of this work is as important as the piece itself. In fact, after buying it in 1921, the philosopher Walter Benjamin interpreted the depicted figure as “the angel of history”.

Klee-paul-angelus_novus-1920-imagen taken from Wikipedia
Klee-paul-angelus_novus-1920-imagen taken from Wikipedia

“A Klee painting named Angelus Novus shows an angel looking as though he is about to move away from something he is fixedly contemplating. His eyes are staring, his mouth is open, his wings are spread. This is how one pictures the angel of history. His face is turned toward the past. Where we perceive a chain of events, he sees one single catastrophe which keeps piling wreckage upon wreckage and hurls it in front of his feet. The angel would like to stay, awaken the dead, and make whole what has been smashed. But a storm is blowing from Paradise; it has got caught in his wings with such violence that the angel can no longer close them. The storm irresistibly propels him into the future to which his back is turned, while the pile of debris before him grows skyward. This storm is what we call progress”.

Walter Benjamin, “Theses on the Philosophy of History“, Illuminations, trans. Harry Zohn, New York: Schocken Books, 1969: 249.

I think Angelus Novus is the work which best represents this very moment in our lives in which Coronavirus forced us to think, test, and develop new ways of living.

So, here I am at David Zwirner wearing my pink bandana like a bandit. “Late Klee” occupies two stories of the Georgian building in Grafton Street and does not include “Angelus Novus”. The exhibition displays an array of small works, mostly drawings, Klee made between the years the Nazi party was gaining power and the return to his home country, Switzerland, in 1933, showcasing works made until Klee’s passed over on 29th June 1940.

Perlen und Traenen (Pearls and Tears), 1939 - photo taken at David Zwirner July 2020
Perlen und Traenen (Pearls and Tears), 1939

These drawings are neat lines with no chiaroscuro, a style that allowed Klee to clearly represent his imagery by taking out the unnecessary. In observing such firm lines, drawn with no hesitation as if the artist was in a state of illumination, visitors can find calm. This, I think, is further enhanced as the curatorial strategy seems not to stress much on the socio-political turmoil that marked the years between the two World wars to allow an ample view on Klee’s varied subjects.

Late Klee installation view at David Zwirner - photo taken July 2020
“Late Klee” at David Zwirner – installation view – July 2020

As if the missing of Angelus Novus from the showcase allows us to forget the weight of history, we leave the exhibition with a sense of relief and tranquillity. Maybe even with the hope that our future will find clarity through smart and firm decisions in the style of late Klee’s clear and straightforward drawing technique.

Social distancing – Week 11: The state of our lives

 

In the past weeks, we saw people dying from a new virus. We locked ourselves in our homes and started wearing masks to protect us and our beloved. We started working remotely, and everything went digital. We met on Zoom and had virtual dinners with friends. Exhibitions and art fairs have been converted into VR. Private views happened online. Museum collections have been made accessible to the public online. Gallerists, artists, critics, and collectors talked on live streams. Podcasts and online Yoga sessions boomed. Many of us lost their jobs. Many of us have been furloughed. Nearly two million people claimed Universal Credits. Air transport has been stopped, and planes grounded. We pledged for the universal basic income. We mourned for the killing of George Floyd.  “Please, I can’t breathe” reached the ears of the whole world but the ones of his murderer, the policeman Derek Chauvin. Rage stirred up our hearts. We flooded the streets to protest in support on BLM and against systemic racism. We tore down colonialist monuments of slave-traders. City officials boarded up monuments in London to prevent further damage. Far-right supporters arrived in London to counteract BLM protesters. Protecting British monuments was their pretence. “All lives can’t matter until black lives matter”. We have been alone but together. Parks are full of litter and oceans of plastic. Climate change and global warming are still happening. Our planet is still in an emergency. Now we are preparing for the reopening. Lockdown rules have been relaxed. From Monday, some art Galleries will open again by appointment only. We keep using masks. Planes are still mainly grounded. Anyone entering the UK has to self-isolate for 14 days. France closes its borders to Britons reciprocally. BA, Easy Jet, and Ryanair combined to sue the government over the quarantine. The country GDP reached its lowest record in history (-20% in April). Recession is knocking. Brexit trade meetings are ongoing. Turmoil is the state in which we live.

Social distancing – Week 3: “Stay at Home” & [The Art Happens Here] by Annka Kultys Gallery

screenshot of Surface Collider (23032020) by James Irwin. available at AKG - the art happens here - week 1
screenshot of Surface Collider (23032020), 2020, by James Irwin. Featured in week 1 of “Stay at Home” at AKG

At the beginning of April, Annka Kultys Gallery – a commercial gallery based in East London founded by Annka Kultys in 2015 which represents artists working in the digital sphere – launched a new online platform, [The Art Happens Here]. The platform will showcase “Stay at Home”, a new exhibition of digital art made in response to the Coronavirus pandemic. As with many other galleries, soon after the lockdown announcement in  March, AKG switched its exhibition programme to a digital viewing room. However, [The Art Happens Here]  is an online project on its own which extends beyond the existing gallery programme. The new platform opens up, as written in AKG newsletter, to “online projects of any artist interested in the internet as place of production and distribution.”

 [The art happens here] is an important development in the gallery’s evolution, one that not insignificantly mirrors the evolution of artists’ practices and indeed art itself.

Every Sunday during the lockdown, “Stay at Home” showcases a new artist who investigates the pandemic situation. The artists are selected through an open call, and the exhibition is free and open to everyone (you can access through [The Art Happens Here]). Over the weeks, new posts are added so that, through solo presentations, “Stay at Home” becomes a group show. The idea is not new to AKG. In fact, presenting collective exhibitions through one-week solo shows is a familiar format to Annka Kultys who, the past winter, opened “Cacotopia 04” (11th Jan – 15th Feb 2020), the fourth edition of the gallery’s annual survey of leading emerging artists in the contemporary art space. Like “Stay at Home”, also “Cacotopia” four editions are group exhibitions presented in the format of solo shows allocated to a single artist every week.

week 3 AKG instagram story 1 of 2 - OPEN CALL
week 3 AKG Instagram story 1 of 2 – Open Call

Whereas the two projects are similar, they are not identical. In fact, “Cacotopia” lasts four weeks and consequently showcases four artists only. While “Stay at Home” will present a new artist each week the lockdown goes on. Hopefully, these will be just a handful of weeks, but as we can see from other countries, the lockdown could last 10 weeks or more (i.e., Italy is in its 7th week and the lockdown has just been extended for another month. Now planned to end early May 2020). Therefore, by continuing over time and presenting more artists, there is potential that “Stay at Home” will become a much bigger and more articulated project than its older brother “Cacotopia” and could even serve as new digital art database.

screenshot of Social Disstancing Portraits, 2020, by Adad Hannah. available at AKG - the art happens here - week 2
screenshot of Social Distancing Portraits, 2020, by Adad Hannah. features in week 2 of “Stay at Home” at AKG

On one side, the group exhibition format of single-artist-presentations allows “Stay at Home” to be identified as a creature of Annka Kultys Gallery progressively establishing the gallery signature. On the other side, the gallery is not only doing a great act of gallantry by giving a chance to ‘any’ artist to be exhibited by a commercial gallery but also providing a platform, namely [The Art Happens Here], where art made during the quarantine can be seen by the people.

Ah! and if this is not enough, all the gallery benefits of the sold works will be donated for Coronavirus research!

week 3 AKG instagram story 2 of 2 - Open Call
week 3 AKG Instagram story 2 of 2 – Open Call

 

Stay Home Instagram