Curating Popular Art. The exhibition includes several of the original exhibits from 1951, including the fireplace in the shape of an Airedale dog, alongside unseen archive material from the University of Brighton Design Archives, the Vogue Archives and the Whitechapel Gallery Archive.
Curated by Simon Costin and Nayia Yiakoumak
The Whitechapel Gallery presents a new archive display revisiting the
Gallery’s 1951 exhibition Black Eyes and Lemonade. Coinciding with the
Festival of Britain, the exhibition challenged established ideas about the
cultural value attached to particular kinds of objects. Celebrating
everyday items, from the traditional and the handmade to the mass
produced, it included lavishly decorated pub mirrors, an edible model of
St Paul’s Cathedral and a talking lemon advertising Idris lemon squash.
This presentation at the Whitechapel Gallery includes several of the
original exhibits from 1951, including the fireplace in the shape of an
Airedale dog, alongside unseen archive material from the University of
Brighton Design Archives, the Vogue Archives and the Whitechapel
Gallery Archive. Re-examining Black Eyes and Lemonade over half a
century after it was originally staged, the exhibition looks afresh at the
presentation and curation of popular art.
Entitled Black Eyes and Lemonade, after the Thomas Moore poem
Intercepted Letters or The Two-Penny Post Bag (1813), the original
exhibition explored topics including advertising, toys, festivities and
souvenirs and featured ship figureheads, old Valentines, quilts and
Salvation Army uniforms. All the exhibits shown were made or
manufactured in Britain.
The 1951 exhibition was organised by artist, designer and writer Barbara
Jones. It was divided into categories such as Home, Birth-Marriage-
Death, Man’s Own Image and Commerce & Industry, reflecting Jones’s
ideas on museum culture and questioning the cultural values attached to
both handmade and machine made objects. Stating that ‘the museum eye
must be abandoned’, Jones created a provocative spectacle which posed
questions about hierarchies of value, making and manufacturing as well
as consumption while championing the judgement of makers, collectors
and consumers.
Many of the items included in the exhibition came from Jones’s own
collection and were acquired during travels, from bazaars, second-hand
shops, and directly from makers. Further exhibits were sourced during a
road trip in June 1951 that Jones made in a converted London taxi with
her co-organiser Tom Ingram. This presentation features material from
Jones’s surviving studio, highlighting her innovative curatorial approach
and the connections she was able to draw across images and objects.
The exhibition is part of the Whitechapel Gallery’s dedicated programme
curating archives of individual artists or institutions. The exhibition is co-
curated with director of the Museum of British Folklore, Simon Costin,
design historian Catherine Moriarty and Curator, Archive Gallery,
Whitechapel Gallery, Nayia Yiakoumaki.
Press Information
Claire Rocha da Cruz on 020 7522 7880, 07811 456 806 or email
Clairerochadacruz@whitechapelgallery.org
Daisy Mallabar on 020 7522 7871 or email
DaisyMallabar@whitechapelgallery.org
Whitechapel
77-82 Whitechapel High Street, London
Opening times: Tuesday – Sunday, 11am – 6pm, Thursdays 11am – 9pm
Free Admission