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Portraiture again

I have been thinking a little more lately about portraiture. One especially interesting sub-category of the genre is portraits of artists by their friends, indeed these have much to say about friendship itself—as does the exquisite double concerto for violin, cello, and orchestra in A minor by Johannes Brahms (opus 102), the composition of which was prompted by the reconciliation of two friends temporarily estranged due to taking sides in a messy divorce, but that is an entirely different story.

Here is a portrait of the eminent Dutch still-life painter Coenraet Roepel by his friend Richard van Bleeck; both artists were born and educated in The Hague. The picture was most probably painted to commemorate Roepel’s appointment in 1716 to be one of the painters attached to the court of the Elector Palatine of the Rhine in Düsseldorf, of which the big gold medal he wears suspended from a long chain was a handsome and very conspicuous token. (The recto of the medal is, of course, decorated with the Elector’s profile portrait.) The sitter is shown executing one of his own paintings, and in a delicious conceit, Roepel himself executed that skillfully foreshortened portion of the canvas, and signed it for good measure.

Still-life paintings of this kind were not merely pleasing aggregations of fruit and flowers, although they certainly could function as decorations on this straightforward level, and often with pleasing seasonal allusions—best contemplated in the depths of winter at the end of the little ice age. However, they could also be ruminations upon the cycle of life: budding, ripeness, over-ripeness, degeneration, and decay—such that the bursting fig, the wilting rose, and the bruised peach will soon be food for snails, and evidently spiders as well—there is a small but conspicuous web. So too men are food for worms. Such was the argument thundered from many Dutch Protestant pulpits.

The handling of Roepel’s palette, specifically the rather unconventional arrangement of his colors, meanwhile, is so specific that it raises the question whether Roepel supplied it also.

His smile combines a hint of mischief and much self-satisfaction, though his eyes are steady, even shrewd.

However—and this struck me as worth pointing out when on Saturday morning I spoke about the painting where it currently hangs at Sperone Westwater Gallery in New York—there is another ingeniously telling aspect of the artist’s disposition. His powdered wig is aspirational, and (along with the rest of his costume) socially ambitious, but Van Bleeck has shown the wig casually pushed back away from Roepel’s brow, perhaps with the clean end of his brush, to let in some air, to alleviate a certain scratchiness, or get it out of the road while he attends to some fine detail maybe up close. One sees very clearly the shaven part of Roepel’s scalp that would normally be covered. It is a delightful detail, and one which also reminds us of the bizarre circularity of habits of fashion.

The powdered wig or perruque, which developed through the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, began as an approximation of real hair, but the wearing of increasingly elaborate wigs made it absolutely necessary for wig-wearing gentlemen to crop or even shave their hair because unless they did so the wig simply could not be worn. There were also problems of infestation—fleas mainly.

Also, a properly powdered wig, which helped with dubious smells, naturally through the course of the working day deposited a good deal of fine dust over the shoulder parts of a gentleman’s coat, and that phenomenon is very often represented in portraits, as it is here. This is no discoloration of the cloth, or a clumsy misreading of certain effects of light. It’s powder, suggesting that eighteenth-century servants all over Europe must have grappled with a more or less constant film of dust settling unhelpfully on virtually every surface. One wonders whether it also found its way into the paint film. I must ask Mark Aronson.

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Slideshow: See posters by Artists for the NHS


Undefined

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UK Artists Protest the Government’s Plot to Privatize National Health Insurance


English
by Coline Milliard, ARTINFO UK
Published: February 6, 2012

Who said artists were apolitical? As the British government’s Health and Social Care Bill returns to Parliament this week, contemporary artists have launched a campaign to protest what would effectively be the privatisation of a large section of Britain’s National Health Services — the biggest reorganization of the NHS in its 64-year history.

Plotted by writer Niru Ratnam and curator Sarah McCrory in conversation with GP campaigner Jonathon Tomlinson, the blog “Artists for the NHS” went live on February 1st, and features posters by Scott King, Ryan Gander, Goshka Macuga, Richard Wentworth, and John Hill for the artists collective Lucky PDF. Further contributions by Alistair Frost, Nick Relph, and Spartacus Chetwynd are also in the pipeline.

The blog, explained Ratnam to ARTINFO, is “produced with a non-expert point of view,” to “add another dimension to the debate,” and encourage people to sign the e-petition created by Dr Kailash Chand OBE, GP and chairman of Tameside and Glossop NHS. This morning, 47,754 signatures had been gathered. Under Downing Street regulations, if the count reaches 100,000 the government is obliged to pursue the matter.

The artists who answered Ratnam and McCrory’s call are not, says the writer, “the ones you would normally see in the newspapers.” Turner Prize-nominee Macuga has produced a hospital-leaflet-like picture showing a doctor examining a patient with the caption: “Mr Cameron, you have a problem, only the NHS can save you.” Gander has contributed with a stark “Wot No NHS?,” King’s reproduced a (faux?) comment from an X Factor contestant about her experience at the hospital, and Wentworth dug out his “In Labour, Better Births” poster first produced for a Labour Party fundraiser.

This project is symptomatic of the artistic community’s renewed political involvement after the two-decade-long lull of the “bling era.” Last year, more than a hundred artists including Anthony Caro, Martin Boyce, Tracey Emin, and Anish Kapoor, rallied to support the “Save the Arts” campaign against the government’s 25 percent cuts in art funding. The campaign is now over, but the Visual Arts London Strategy Group will continue to develop some of the ideas generated during Save the Arts.

“Artists for the NHS” is also another sign of the growing discontent with the government’s proposed reform, which has been condemned by major health professional associations in the country including the British Medical Association and the Royal College of Midwives. The Health Service Journal, Nursing Times, and British Medical Journal recently published a joint editorial claiming that the new system would be “unstable,” and MPs are currently discussing a cross-party strategy to bring the reform to the halt.

Artists are now bringing their tongue-in-cheek wit to the conversation, hoping to further it in non-specialist circles. It could well be just the beginning. Last week BMA council member Dr. Jacky Davis tweeted: “‘Wot No NHS?’ should be on the side of every bus.”

“Artists for the NHS” is currently run on a shoestring, and mass printing is not an option yet — but considering how quickly they are garnering support, things could change quickly. On the blog the group state: “we’re calling [the artists' contributions] posters, because if we get some money some day soon, we will print them up as posters, which you can then go and stick on the car-screens of those good folk who working for those private firms like KPMG who are rubbing their hands in anticipation of making lots of cash from what used to be the NHS.”

If the Bill isn’t stopped, the new health laws will take effect in Britain will start in April 2013. 

To see posters from the “Artists for the NHS” campaign, click the slide show.

by Coline Milliard, ARTINFO UK,Contemporary Arts, Society

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Here in the Sugar Cane

STUDIO 246, BRUNSWICK: While showcasing the promising and consistent offerings at Studio 246, Here in the Sugar Cane could perhaps do with a tweak.

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Kate Grenville

Kate Grenville offers her insights into everything writing ahead of Adelaide Writers’ Week.

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Emma Horwood

Emma Horwood is a Soprano with the Adelaide Chamber Singers.

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Geoff Cobham

Meet the man behind Adelaide Festival’s shanty town of celebration – the Barrio.

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Luke Clayson

Luke graduated as an actor from AC Arts in 2005 during which he performed in Puberty Blues, The Trial and Hamlet.

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India Art Fair 2012: For international galleries, India focus among emerging economies

EVENTS CONTEMPORARY ART MARKET

The India Art Fair, formerly named the India Art Summit, closed its doors for the fourth time on 29 January 2012. An estimated crowd of 80,000 came to see over 1000 works of art brought to the event by 98 galleries from twenty countries. Read on to find out what collectors snapped up.

Sam Jinks, 'Woman and Child', 2010, mixed media. (The man on the right is not part of the artwork, but instead is an interested observer.)

Sam Jinks, 'Woman and Child', 2010, mixed media. (The man on the right is not part of the artwork, but an interested observer.)

New collectors, lower price points

While the number of diehard collectors remained small, the press noted a strong young collector presence and a high number of galleries from second tier cities around India, such as Jaipur and Ahmedabad.

Newer and younger collectors, especially those buying art for the first time, don’t hit straight for the top artists like [M. F.] Husain or [S. H.] Raza because of the prohibitive prices. They want to begin at lower price points and that’s where galleries like mine come in to help initiate them into the world of buying art.

Manan Relia, Archer Art Gallery

Many journalists in attendance reported that participants seemed unusually enthusiastic, whether attendees were buying or not.

‘Passionate’ is not a word you normally associate with art fairs, but it’s the right one for the atmosphere at the India Art Fair.

Madeleine O’Dea, journalist, ARTINFO

 

 

The mood of excitement to see things and to learn is palpable. There is tremendous spirit.

Hugo Weihe, International Specialist Head, Indian & South-East Asian Art, Christie’s

Watch the video above for a short tour of some of the galleries at the fair conducted by freelance curator Nadia Schneider.

The significant drop in footfall from last year’s 128,000-person-strong event was apparently intentional. Neha Kirpal, founder of the India Art Fair, moved the event from the Pragati Maidan, in the heart of New Delhi, to the more remote NSIC Exhibition Ground, a location that is an hour from the city centre, with the hope of increasing the number of serious buyers in attendance.

Indian contemporary and modern art sells well

Sales were moderately positive, with works in the 55,000-100,000 rupee range (USD1,100-2,000) selling best.

At the recently-ended India Art Fair, sales were better than last year, with 90 percent of the roughly ninety Indian and international galleries participating in the fair selling between one to four works of art.

 

All international galleries have vowed to come back next year, the event’s organisers say, something that had not been the case last year.

Margherita Stancati and Shefali Anand, journalists, The Wall Street Journal

Bangladeshi collector couple Nadia and Rajeeb Samdani were said to have gone on a miniature spending spree at the vernissage, exclusively snapping up Indian contemporary works including pieces by Rashid Rana and Nandalal Bose. Erstwhile collector of Chinese contemporary art and founder of the Ullens Center for Contemporary Art, Baron Guy Ullens, was also seen prowling the aisles, perhaps as a result of his admitted admiration for Indian artist Bharti Ker.

ARTINFO

  Watch the video above for an interview of Shireen Gandhy by The Wall TV. Gandhy gives us an insight into the work of contemporary artists Desmond Lazaro and Mithu Sen.

Work by the Indian modernists proved more popular among collectors than other works, despite Kirpal’s attempts at making the fair more international through the development of a Collectors’ Circle and a move to a new venue in an effort to encourage more serious collectors to attend the fair.

What I’d like to see more of is international artists being sold here, but Indian collectors only pick up work they recognise. They aren’t willing to experiment just yet.

Ursula Krinzinger, Galerie Krinzinger

The Indian market is familiar with Indian artists, who sold more. India was a learning experience for us. We have not participated in any other fairs in Asia earlier, barring Art Hong Kong.

James Lavender, Associate Director, Hauser & Wirth Gallery

Local collectors lack international art knowledge

Not all galleries showing work by non-Indian artists walked away disappointed, with many viewing their attendance at the fair as the first step into a new market. London’s Lisson Gallery chose to focus on one well-known artist, Marina Abramović, and was pleased with the positive reception her work received. Diamond dust-covered silk screen prints by British artist Damien Hirst were Other Criteria’s offering, and they sold well.

India is our focus in the emerging economies. We are looking at young collectors. Damien [Hirst] is a supporter of young artists. This is our first visit to India as a company and the response has been overwhelming. We have sold many prints.

Charlotte Nunn, Other Criteria

Damien Hirst prints for sale at the India Art Fair.

Damien Hirst prints for sale at the India Art Fair.

White Cube’s Hirsts were less successful, and the gallery found that many Indian collectors were unfamiliar with work by big name, international artists. Work by well-established modernists was the hottest seller, and some commentators saw this as either evidence of Indian collectors sticking with safe investment options in an uncertain economic climate, or an indication that local collectors are starting to branch out from typical purchases of Indian art.

Indians are looking at more and more European modern classics as investment options.

Peter Femfert, Die Galerie (Frankfurt)

People want deals. Collectors have returned to buying the modern masters because the contemporary market has lost value, so they have lost confidence in it.

Kishore Singh, Delhi Art Gallery

It’s a confidence of the emerging Indian art market. It’s a real transformation, both in terms of artistic production and its audience. It’s gone from being an insular market to one where appreciation builds everyday.

Sundaram Tagore, Sundaram Tagore Gallery

In this video The Wall TV speaks to Sandaram Tagore about ‘works which bring the cross-cultural context together’.

Holds in place of sales

Many galleries reported that they had secured a number of “strong holds” in place of finalised sales, and they expected the sale of these holds to take place later in the year.

The works that we [have] got here are the best. We have given out many price quotations to visitors here, so we can hope that after the fair ends, collectors might get back [to us].

Galerie Krinzinger

There are enquiries about art works, but if we talk of actual sales, nothing major has materialised. Business is low and people are wary when it comes to investing in art.

Tunty Chauhan, Threshold Gallery

There was a lot of intent, asking and looking, but we sold to our old buyers. The organisers have to be more exclusive about selecting the galleries….

Usha Gawde, Sakshi Gallery

After two years of economic slowdown, it was hoped the fair would bring momentum to the art scene and pull galleries out of [the] doldrums. This hasn’t happened. Not everyone is negative though. Sunaina Anand from Art Alive Gallery, chirped, ‘At least people know what to buy. We can wait for another year for business to flourish.’

The Pioneer

New media eclipses traditional mediums

Painting and sculpture failed to attract as much attention as video, photography, mixed media and monumental installations, a trend that was reflected in sales figures. In this 2012 edition, work by 69 video and new media artists was on display, including pieces by Babu Eshwar Prasad, Nikhil Chopra and Mat Collishaw.

Of course, you can’t put up the fancy 3D jazz at your place, but here, plain paint … no, not working.

Andrew Hert, visitor and collector

Improved sales of photo prints at this year’s India Art Fair are the latest indication that the Indian market is gradually opening up to photography.

 

While Devika Daulet-Singh of Photo Ink, a Delhi-based photography gallery, describes the space for photography in India’s art scene as still ‘small’, she says collectors are becoming more and more comfortable with the idea of limited edition prints.

Margherita Stancati and Shefali Anand, journalists, The Wall Street Journal

There has been a movement towards new media and unusual art [and away] from classic and modern art. The buyers are also conscious about quality and price, which is a post meltdown phenomenon.

 Sharan Apparao, Apparao Galleries

Subodh Gupta, 'Incubate', 2010, stainless steel pots and pans.

Subodh Gupta, 'Incubate', 2010, stainless steel pots and pans.

India Art Fair: Not yet perfect

The India Art Fair has come under criticism in the past for being chaotic and bazaar-like, and the 2012 edition of the fair was not bereft of snags. Some gallerists reeled at the non-buying public that crowded out serious collectors. Others complained that the timing overlap with the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, may have led to weakened sales. India’s notoriously ambivalent bureaucracy also irritated some gallery owners, despite Kirpal’s administrative coup of obtaining “temporary museum status” for the event, allowing international galleries to skirt import tariffs.

While the overall response to the fair has been positive, I hope the next time, the organisers can help with the administrative difficulties.

Jose Fermin Serrano, LaAurora

…once past the smartly-hung big exhibitors, the quality took a sharp plunge downwards, with some stands plastered with a cacophony of garish paintings, floor to ceiling. ‘If we took just the really good Indian galleries, there would be about ten,’ explained one member of the selection committee. Next year, the committee will include some international selectors.

The Art Newspaper

 

The fair also got its share of praise from gallerists, the audience and the press for its new venue, a good balance of galleries (international and local, blue chip and second tier) and the wide range of price points.

[An] opening up of the space has allowed gallerists and curators to display art works and installations much more aesthetically; murmurs among art professionals [show that many] are comparing it to the Chelsea Art Fair.

Jyoti Pande Lavakare, journalistBusiness Standard

This whole fair shows [that] the best galleries from across the world are making directly for India. The fair is running like clockwork and I’ve never seen so many chairmen of auction houses.

Suhel Seth, Indian analyst and lobbyist

PR/KN/HH

Related Topics: contemporary art fairs, New Delhi art events, promoting art

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