Tate Britain
London
Millbank
+44 020 78878000 FAX +44 020 78878729
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L.S. Lowry
dal 25/6/2013 al 19/10/2013

Segnalato da

Alexandra Jacobs


approfondimenti

L.S. Lowry



 
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25/6/2013

L.S. Lowry

Tate Britain, London

Lowry and the Painting of Modern Life. Focusing on the best of Lowry's urban scenes and industrial landscapes including Tate's Coming Out of School 1927 and The Pond 1950 alongside significant loans, this timely and carefully selected exhibition aims to re-assess Lowry's contribution to art history and to argue for his achievement as Britain's pre-eminent painter of the industrial city.


comunicato stampa

This summer, Tate Britain presents a major exhibition of landscapes by the much-loved British painter L.S. Lowry – the first of its kind held by a public institution in London since the artist’s death.

Focusing on the best of Lowry’s urban scenes and industrial landscapes including Tate’s Coming Out of School 1927 and The Pond 1950 alongside significant loans, this timely and carefully selected exhibition aims to re-assess Lowry’s contribution to art history and to argue for his achievement as Britain’s pre-eminent painter of the industrial city.

Lowry and the Painting of Modern Life demonstrates Lowry’s connections and debts to French painting of the later 19th century and its determination to make art out of the realities of the emerging modern city. It reveals what Lowry learned from the strange symbolist townscapes of his French born teacher Adolphe Valette and demonstrate important parallels with the painters of modern life Vincent van Gogh, Camille Pissarro, Georges Seurat and Maurice Utrillo, drawing upon these artists’s continuous search for ways to depict the unlovely facts of the city’s edges and the landscape made by industrialisation.

For Lowry modern painting needed to represent the remaining rituals of public life: football matches and protest marches, evictions and fist-fights, workers going to and from the mill. Without his pictures, Britain would arguably lack an account in paint of the experiences of the 20th-century working class. Lowry and the Painting of Modern Life reveals how Lowry developed his structure of the city based on his personal relationship to social space. Works such as Pit Tragedy 1919 (The Lowry, Salford); An Accident 1926 (Manchester Art Gallery) and The Fever Van 1935 (Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool) demonstrate Lowry’s unique engagement with street life and his development of a cast of characters portraying the ways in which his subjects’ lives unfold and become unstuck, highlighting the unpredictability and unsteadiness of working-class life.

As a modern painter Lowry wished to show what the industrial revolution had made of the world, yet his dominant status in British art coincided with a disappearance of the industrialised world he engaged with. The exhibition’s final room presents for the first time all eight of his less well known, late industrial panoramas, where a leap up to ‘history painting’ size indicates the measure of his final ambition. These large panoramic landscapes fall into two groups: the first, from the 1950s, are titled, with intentional generality, Industrial Landscapes. The second, less well known group was painted in the 1960s in the mining valleys of South Wales, the heartland of the Labour movement. In both the tone is valedictory.

Related events
Talks and lectures
Lowry guided exhibition tours
Tuesdays, Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays at 15.15 during the exhibition
Curator’s Tour: Lowry and the Painting of Modern Life
Monday 2 September 2013, 18.30 – 20.00
Audio Description: Lowry and the Painting of Modern Life
Monday 16 September 2013, 11.00 – 12.30
British Sign Language Talk: Lowry and the Painting of Modern Life
Friday 20 September 2013, 19.00 – 20.00
Talk and Private View. Lowry: The Bigger Picture
Monday 7 October 2013, 18.30 – 20.30
Panel: The Painting of Modern Life in Britain
Thursday 10 October 2013, 18.30 – 20.30
Courses and workshops
Wanderlust: Imagining the landscape
Fridays 14 June – 12 July 2013, 18.45 – 20.45
Film
Lowry on Film
Monday 23 September 2013, 18.30 – 21.00

Press contact:
Kate Moores / Alexandra Jacobs, Tate Press Office
Call +44(0)20 7887 4906/4942 Email pressoffice@tate.org.uk

Tate Britain
Millbank, London
Open daily 10.00 - 18.00
See two exhibitions with one ticket: Patrick Caulfield and Gary Hume for £13.10 (£11.30 concessions) or £14.50 (£12.50 concessions) with Gift Aid donation. For public information number please print +44(0)20 7887 8888

IN ARCHIVIO [116]
Susan Philipsz
dal 19/11/2015 al 2/4/2016

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