Tate Britain announces autumn season of BP Spotlights

25 Years of the BP and Tate partnership

LONDON, 2-9-2014 — /EuropaWire/ — Tate Britain’s autumn season of BP Spotlights is announced today. The BPSpotlights include Tate collection works and loans that explore a particular theme or focus on the work of one artist or group of artists.

Autumn highlights include three-dimensional photographs from the collection of Dr. Brian May shown beside their Pre-Raphaelite counterparts; a selection of works by William Hogarth to mark the 250th anniversary of his death; and a display of paintings, reliefs and sculptures by one of Britain’s most important Constructivist artists, Marlow Moss. There will also be rooms devoted to the primitive and carnivalesque work of Caroline Achaintre and to two series of work entitled Belgravia and Gentlemen by photographer Karen Knorr.

‘Poor man’s picture gallery’: Victorian Art and Stereoscopic Photography
Monday 13 October 2014 – Sunday 12 April 2015

A Poor Mans Picture Gallery is the first display in a major British art gallery devoted to the nineteenth century craze of three-dimensional photography. A number of Tate’s famous Victorian and Pre-Raphaelite works will be shown, such as Wallis’ Chatteron and Frith’s Derby Day alongside a rare collection of their three-dimensional photographic doubles all of which have been kindly loaned to Tate by Dr. Brian May (b.1947).

William Hogarth
Monday 27 October 2014 – Sunday 26 April 2015

Marking the 250th anniversary of William Hogarth’s (1697–1764) death, this display presents the artist as a pre-eminent figure in the canon of British art. Uniting his paintings, chalk drawings and prints, the display will examine the acquisition history of the pieces and the relationship between Tate and works by Hogarth in the collection.

Karen Knorr
Monday 13 October 2014 – Sunday 29 March 2015

This display brings together two series of work by the photographer Karen Knorr (b.1954): Belgravia 1979-81 and Gentlemen 1981-83, which form part of the Eric and Louise Franck London Collection. The series explore the relationship between image and text, patriarchal values of the upper middle classes and the aspirations and lifestyles of the privileged minority.

Caroline Achaintre
Monday 13 October 2014 – Sunday 3 May 2015

The work of Caroline Achaintre (b. 1969) encompasses a diverse range of media including textiles, ceramics, woodcuts and watercolours evoking the primitive and the carnivalesque. At times menacing, sexual and playful they allude to early moments in modernism such as German Expressionism, while at the same time presenting contradictions between art and design, fashion and taste, abstraction and figuration.

William Hazlitt: Through the Eyes of a Critic
Monday 29 September 2014 – Sunday 5 April 2015

This display looks at works by artists including Joshua Reynolds and JMW Turner through the eyes of the man Kenneth Clark deemed ‘the best critic before Ruskin’, William Hazlitt (1778-1830). Hazlitt first trained as a painter and went on to become one of the premiere essayists of his day, valuing gusto (power, passion) and fidelity to nature above all. His discussion of works now in the Tate collection forms the focus of this display.

New Brutalist Image 1949-1955
Monday 24 November 2014 – Sunday 4 October 2015

The sculptor Eduardo Paolozzi (1924-2005), photographer Nigel Henderson (1917-1985) and architects Alison and Peter Smithson (1928-93; 1923-2003) collaborated on three separate projects at the same time: Hunstanton School in Norfolk, an office for engineer Ronald Jenkins, and the exhibition ‘Parallel of Life and Art’. With a rich array of unseen material, this display will explore how these apparently diverse projects all fell under the label ‘New Brutalism’.

Marlow Moss
Monday 29 September 2014 – Sunday 22 March 2015

Marlow Moss (1890-1958), once overlooked, is now regarded as an important British Constructivist artist. Drawn from British and European collections, this display includes a rare 1930s work recently acquired by Tate and examines how her paintings, reliefs and sculptures interrogate movement, space and light. Her works are highly abstract and are often compared to those by Mondrian to whom she was close.

Spaces of Black Modernism: London 1919-1939
Monday 13 October 2014 – Sunday 29 March 2015

In the inter-war period, the studios, art colleges and social clubs of Chelsea, Bloomsbury and Soho became places of multi-ethnic exchange – bringing together icons such as sculptor Ronald Moody,(1900-84), jazz singer Elisabeth Welch (1908-2003) and writer Nancy Cunard (1896-1965). The display includes paintings, sculpture, photographs and archival material. Spaces of Black Modernism explores how cosmopolitan networks of artists, activists, writers and artists’ models helped shape the cultural and political identity of the city.

David Hall: TV Interruptions
Monday 13 October 2014 – Sunday 29 March 2015

David Hall’s (b.1937) TV Interruptions is an installation consisting of seven films that were initially conceived as short interventions to be broadcast on television as part of the Edinburgh Festival in 1971. The films depict simple actions, ranging from burning television sets to a running household tap. In the installation, films are shown alongside each other on seven randomly clustered monitors. Viewing is interrupted as sound and image merge and conflict, evoking a similar experience to when the films were originally shown on television.

Reception, Rupture and Return: The Model and the Life Room
Continues until Sunday 19 April 2015

Reception, Rupture and Return: The Model and the Life Room examines the role of the life model for the artist and the changing status of life drawing from the 19th to the 21st centuries. The display includes unique perspectives of three artists’ models from the Tate archive.  It will explore themes such as the model as a person, as a political vehicle, as a challenger to convention, and the rethinking of the model during the inter-war and post-war periods.

For further information please contact Kate.Moores@tate.org.ukor Sara.Chan@tate.org.uk

Or call +44(0)20 7887 4906/8732. For high resolution images visit tate.org.uk/press

BP’s support for UK Arts & Culture
2014 marks the 25th anniversary of the BP and Tate partnership.  Across this timeBP has enabled Tate Britain to present the national collection of British Art to the public for free.  Over 35 million people have now seen the BP Displays since they were unveiled in January 1990 and BP’s continued support allows Tate to regularly change the displays so the public can enjoy the breadth of the world’s greatest collection of British Art.

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Henry Wallis Chatterton 1856 Oil on canvas support: 622 x 933 mm frame: 905 x 1205 x 132 mm Bequeathed by Charles Gent Clement 1899

Henry Wallis
Chatterton 1856
Oil on canvas
support: 622 x 933 mm frame: 905 x 1205 x 132 mm
Bequeathed by Charles Gent Clement 1899

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