Art

I found myself in Piccadilly last week with an hour to spare between a meeting and a lunch. As I walked up Duke Street St James I was greeted by the welcoming sight of the Royal Academy’s David Hockney banners and thought “why not?!” I am lucky enough to bank with one of the sponsors so got in without queuing and, as I walked up the stairs, I pondered my pre-exhibition thoughts on Hockney. I am not sure why but I don’t feel I have ever been entirely convinced. I know that I am expected to think of him as important, I hear others describe him as the greatest living British Artist, but I am not sure that I actually like his work.

I forced my way through the busiest shop in history to the entrance and on into the opening room, Thixendale Trees, to be greeted by billions of people, the murmur of intellectual artistic discussion and some huge paintings in the main Octagon. My immediate thought was “If I took art classes, I think this might be what I would end up with.” Broad brush strokes, bright colours and distorted perspective. I would like to add here that in no way am I comparing myself to David Hockney, and I know that these paintings contain more skill with a brush than I will ever have.

I don’t tend to hang around at exhibitions where paintings do not grab me, so I wandered into the second room, Earlier Landscapes. I was immediately floored by an early painting of Hockney’s. It’s name now escapes me but it reminded me of paintings by de Staël and it was mesmerising – things were looking up. Rooms 3 & 4 were skimmed through, but room  5, Tunnels, grabbed me again.

I remember as a child, driving to see my Grandmother through the tree-formed tunnels of Sussex and thinking how amazing that was. And just this weekend experienced the same in Devon. There is something romantic and fascinating about the way that trees grow towards each other to create an intertwining tunnel through which you can drive or stand to shade yourself from the sun, or life. And as I stood in the Royal Academy, I suddenly realised that perhaps my kinship with tunnels, and maybe David Hockney’s too, is that I have a regular discussion with myself about my own mortality. I am not pessimistic, defeatist or obsessed about my own death, no, more that I regularly have to remind myself that this is my life, I must make the most of it, because one day, once I have passed through whichever tunnel I choose, I will die. Sometimes, I convince myself that I will die sooner than I ought (when I have a cold, or a slight pain in my side!) but that is something entirely different!

The paintings in the Tunnels room were gorgeous, simple, romantic and evoked memories, beautiful childlike memories that had long since been filed in the draws of life. The best however was yet to come and I was warming to Hockney immensely.

The Arrival of Spring, David Hockney at the Royal Academy

The Arrival of Spring, David Hockney at the Royal Academy

I walked into Room 9, The Arrival of Spring and was thunderstruck by the scale of the room. There are 51 prints and one large painting in the room and it charts the transition from Winter to Spring. All of the prints were originally done on an iPad and you would never know, he is a total master and it is staggering! It is also amazing that the dates of the show correspond (roughly) with the prints in the room, so you can see whether the depiction Spring in Woldgate in 2011 is the same as it is now, here in London. It is not, by the way! They have bigger forests and we seem to have earlier blossom! It is safe to say that I am now a fully fledged Hockney fan and this room is utterly brilliant.

The final room I loved was totally unexpected. Having spent the entire journey focusing on nature, I suddenly walked into a room full of versions of The Sermon on the Mount by Claude Lorrain. Apparently, Hockney went to New York in December 2009 and was struck by this painting on a visit to the Frick Collection. He researched, drew related pieces and digitally cleaned the surface of the dark picture, did his own variation “after Claude” and then set about doing a number of studies, many of which are shown in the exhibition before settling on his final work: A Bigger Message.

This last room and the whole exhibition is just enjoyable, you get such a sense of Hockney having had fun in the process of creation. I love it when you go to see anything Arts related, with few expectations, and leave having had an experience that will stay with you for ever.

Loved by on April 11, 2012.

We love the new exhibition at The Portman Gallery, one of our esteemed clients. ‘The Rest is Silence’ features the works of American photographer Matt Lambros in this highly topical UK premiere exhibition.

Matt’s extraordinary photographs tell the stories of decaying theatres from across the US. ‘The Rest is Silence’ presents 12 of his Abandoned collection, each showing how these buildings of cultural importance can fade before our eyes when the Arts loses support within a society.

“I’ve spent ten years composing photographic obituaries for once-thriving buildings that are now crumbled and forgotten. My hope for my work is that it will shine light on beautiful, dated architecture and on the equal yet sinister beauty in decay” – Matt Lambros

Matt’s work must remind us, the patrons, why supporting theatres and galleries in our cultural landscape is of the utmost importance.

Look what will happen if we don’t…

The Rest is Silence runs online at The Portman Gallery throughout December.

Loved by on December 13, 2011.

The Jalloro team had a meeting with the brilliant British artist, James Hart Dyke yesterday. He has some very exciting things in the pipeline. We can’t wait to see his new work over the course of the next year or so.

Loved by on May 10, 2011.

The very talented and totally charming artist, James Howard, has a show opening at the Aubin Gallery next week. We have had the pleasure of designing an exciting catalogue for him – make sure you pick one up form the exhibition when you visit. Authorized at Aubin Gallery from 27 April to 26 May.

Loved by on April 21, 2011.

Five years ago, as the world began to realise that the internet was not an overnight phenomenon, if someone had told you that in excess of £50bn is expected to change hands online in 2011, and that the high street would begin to look like the set of a Hollywood western, you would have thought them crazy. But it is unfolding on our screens. The world has got the online shopping bug and it seems that now the Arts wants to get involved.

Since January, Jalloro has won six e-commerce jobs and we have launched 2 platforms already:

while we are currently working on another 4, an online art gallery, More.

Loved by on March 28, 2011.

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