e – news
Slow Art : June
15th – July 10th.
Group
Show: Luke Elwes, Pierre Imhof, Ingrid Kerma, Gary Komarin, Alf Löhr, Kate
Palmer, Andrew Vass.
“What we need more of is
slow art: art that holds time as a
vase holds water: art that grows out of modes of perception and making whose
skill and doggedness make you think and feel; art that isn't merely
sensational, that doesn't get its message across in ten seconds, that isn't
falsely iconic, that hooks onto something deep-running in our natures.”
Robert
Hughes at the

Alf Löhr – picture c 150 x 120cm 2003
The artists shown have very
diverse ways of creating work, and different intentions, but all fall within
the boundaries of the remarks made by Robert Hughes. The exhibition is intended
to demonstrate that although not always considered fashionable nonetheless
there is a dynamic, active area of painting that sometimes falls away from the
mainstream ‘mass-media’ characterisation of art. And which highlights the
notion of painting as something that benefits not from a “lifetime of
experience” but from the more demanding “lifetime of practice”.

Ingrid Kerma Untitled 150 x 130cm 2004
This will be the first time
that we have exhibited the work of Luke Elwes and Alf Löhr – more details of them and their work as well as
the other artists in this exhibition can be found on our website www.broadbentgallery.com from Monday
14th June.
NB THERE IS NO PRIVATE
VIEW FOR THIS EVENT AND NO POSTAL INVITATION
Coming soon:
Sam Francis and Contemporaries: 14th July – 4th September

Untitled’, Sam Francis, 1959
Sam Francis sometimes
seems to occupy a curious place in the history of Abstract Expressionism. He
spent time in New York – where he exhibited, with amongst other “first
generation” abstract expressionists, Jackson Pollock at the Martha Jackson
Gallery - but perhaps was more influenced by his time in Europe and in
particular Paris. In the 1950s straddling the
This exhibition will bring
together some of the people he exhibited with through the 1950s and shows the
range of art being produced at this time. As well as work produced by Sam
Francis from the 1950s in
Last Chance:
Kate
Palmer: Everything Happens
New
works on canvas and paper – 22nd April

A
few drawings and a painting will also be in the next group show Slow.
Colour catalogue
available
Visit
our website soon to see more images
of the shows.
Jane
Dixon: Currently has an exhibition at the
Alf Lohr: A show of his paintings
is running concurrent with Slow Art at the German Ambassador’s Residence in
Pierre Imhof: Has been awarded a
residency in Gallery ‘B’ at the Frankfurter Kunstverein,
ROBERT HUGHES the critic perhaps best
known for his book “Shock of the New”
covered a broad range of topics in his controversial speech to the
Hughes
also suggests one should dissociate art from the mass media – “For no spiritually authentic art can beat
mass media at their own game: that, we have to admit and take for granted, and
move on.” The mass media fails to capture or preserve the fragile but rich
edges of creativity that painting and drawing can offer; of course there are
artists that have adapted to the mass media – generally by recognising their
limits and conforming to them - this however does not necessarily make them
better or more interesting: “A string of
brush marks on a lace collar in a Velasquez can be as radical as the shark that
an Australian caught for a couple of Englishmen some years ago and is now
murkily disintegrating in its tank on the other side of the Thames. More
radical, actually.”
Of
course these comments are not limited only to the contemporary or controversial
– the criticism levelled at the ‘modern master’ Edward Hopper and the ‘upstart’
Jack Vettriano can sometimes be summarised as a disappointment that seeing the paintings
in the flesh adds nothing to the experience of the image; that the poster is as
good as the painting, and that the painting is only an icon.
We
need to give painting and drawing a chance to unfold in its own time – to allow
us to respond to its deep looking without being confused by its need to engage
with mass media. But it does mean more legwork – getting to see the painting in
the flesh, as produced by the artist; it also requires more personal commitment
to the piece directly - more intimacy.
Angus Broadbent
All quotes are from the transcript of Robert Hughes’ address at the

Broadbent
25
Chepstow Corner
Tel:
+44 (0)20 7229 8811
Fax: +44 (0)20 7229 8833
www.broadbentgallery.com
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