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Oldest museum to shut its doors

December 23rd, 2008 by admin

Ashmolean Museum (pic courtesy of Freefoto.com) 

The Ashmolean was founded by Oxford University in 1683

Culture-seekers have one day left to visit the UK’s oldest public museum - Oxford University’s Ashmolean - before it closes its doors for nearly a year.

The 325-year-old visitor attraction will be shut to the public from 23 December for a £61m revamp.

Once refurbished, the museum will have 39 new galleries, a new education centre and Oxford’s first rooftop cafe.

Construction work began in 2006 and is funded with support of the Heritage Lottery Fund and the Linbury Trust.

It has had a minimal impact on visitor access to the collections on display, but in 2009, builders will need to undertake the major work of constructing a new front entrance.

From 23 December, there will be no access to the museum or its cafe, although the shop will remain open for business.

The new building, designed by award-winning architect Rick Mather, is set to open in November 2009.

The Ashmolean, which was founded in 1683, features collections covering a wide range of cultures from early Egyptian to Italian Renaissance and 20th Century European art.

Scientists find 2,000-year-old brain in Britain

December 13th, 2008 by admin

LONDON – British archaeologists have unearthed an ancient skull carrying a startling surprise — an unusually well-preserved brain. Scientists said Friday that the mass of gray matter was more than 2,000 years old — the oldest ever discovered in Britain. One expert unconnected with the find called it “a real freak of preservation.”

The skull was severed from its owner sometime before the Roman invasion of Britain and found in a muddy pit during a dig at the University of York in northern England this fall, according to Richard Hall, a director of York Archaeological Trust.

Finds officer Rachel Cubbitt realized the skull might contain a brain when she felt something move inside the cranium as she was cleaning it, Hall said. She looked through the skull’s base and spotted an unusual yellow substance inside. Scans at York Hospital confirmed the presence of brain tissue.

Hall said it was unclear just how much of the brain had survived, saying the tissue had apparently contracted over the years. Parts of the brain have been tentatively identified, but more research was needed, he said.

He said it was a mystery why the skull was buried separately from its body, suggesting human sacrifice and ritual burial as possible explanations.

The existence of a brain where no other soft tissues have survived is extremely rare, according to Sonia O’Connor, an archaeological researcher at the University of Bradford in northern England who helped authenticate the discovery.

“This brain is particularly exciting because it is very well preserved, even though it is the oldest recorded find of this type in the U.K., and one of the earliest worldwide,” she said.

The old brain is unlikely to yield new neurological insights because human brains aren’t thought to have changed much over the past 2,000 years, according to Chris Gosden, a professor of archaeology at Oxford University unconnected with the find.

He confirmed it was the oldest brain found in Britain. He noted that far older preserved brains, thought to be approximately 8,000 years old, were found in 1986 when dozens of intact human skulls were uncovered buried in a peat bog in Windover Farms in Florida.

“It’s a real freak of preservation to have a brain and nothing else,” Gosden said. “The fact that there’s any brain there at all is quite amazing.”

Hall said the brain found at York University was being kept in its skull in an environmentally controlled storage facility for further study.

Jane and Louise Wilson’s best shot

December 4th, 2008 by admin

‘We had to be quick. You can’t stop a whole production line for a picture’

Jane and Louise Wilson's best shot: a photograph of an aircraft engine in a factory in DerbyView larger picture 

Jane and Louise Wilson’s best shot: a photograph of an aircraft engine in a factory in Derby

It looks like it’s floating, but in fact this aircraft engine, which weighs five tonnes, is hanging from the ceiling. We saw it this year when we were scouting the Rolls Royce factory in Derby, a city that has long been a centre for manufacture and transport. In recent years, Derby has also become one of the main centres for Bosnian refugees. We wanted to animate their oral history using imagery that related to modes of displacement: planes, trains and transportation.

We saw this and thought: “God, that looks really interesting. Let’s try and get that!” They had just disassembled the engine to test it - the casing had been lifted away - and they were about to put it together. Because it’s a functioning factory floor, we had to be relatively quick. You can’t stop a whole production line to take a picture. We just hoped what we saw would be there on film.

It is a very theatrical image. Even though it’s static, you feel you’re being drawn into that central circle, where you’ll be enveloped by those arms underneath, as they lift up and embrace you. The engines were hulking, cumbersome things, but there’s something almost decorative about this one. The large silver structure looks like an Arabic design, and there’s something sexualised within the image, lying latent. At the same time, you could be looking at architecture.

• The Wilsons’ installation Spiteful of Dream is at the Quad, Derby (01332 290 606), until January 18.

Curriculum vitae

Born: Newcastle-upon-Tyne, 1967.

Studied: Goldsmiths, London.

Inspirations: Cindy Sherman, Dan Graham, Lucas Samaras, Alexander Rodchenko.

High point: “Realising in 1989 that, by using a Bessler enlarger on its side and some garden troughs, we could make larger prints.”

Low point: “In 2005, when Jane’s wedding pictures didn’t turn out.”

Pet hate: “Obvious digital retouching.”

Dream subject: “We’re excited by a sense of spatial collapse - when visual and personal perspective draw you into an image.”

Rare Eardley hidden behind sketch

November 5th, 2008 by admin

Rare Eardley hidden behind sketch

The two Eardley artworks (Pics courtesy Iain Clark on behalf of artworks' owner) 

An art lover bought the sketch, Boy with the Big Boots, and found the valuable Eardley painting of a boy hidden behind it

A Scots art buyer who paid £22,500 for a drawing by artist Joan Eardley has found a painting hidden inside the frame worth about four times as much.

The art lover sent the drawing, Boy with Big Boots, to be cleaned and when the frame was removed it revealed an oil painting depicting a young boy.

It is thought to show one of Eardley’s favourite models, Andrew Samson.

The new owner, who does not want to be identified, intends to keep both the 1950s works for his private collection.

Art consultant Iain Clark, who runs Artbank - which helps wealthy art lovers build up their collections, took the sketch to Brian McLaughlin, of the Painting & Restoration Studio.

Mr McLaughlin said as he took it out of the frame he noticed there was a signed painting on the back.

“It was astonishing, I was really surprised,” Mr McLaughlin said.

I don’t know who was the original recipient of the drawing, but I think [Eardley's] expected them to get it reframed at some point and to have come across it as a gift
Iain Clark
Art consultant

“The two of us just looked at each other open-mouthed for a good three or four seconds.

“Then the excitement hits you and you’re then - wow, we’ve just found this and it’s been here for 50-odd years and we’re the first two people to see it.”

Mr Clark said, although Eardley was renowned for discarding unwanted work, it was a mystery why it was there at all.

“Had it been a bad painting, or had it not been signed, or had it been cut down from something, I would have thought she’d just used it as backing board,” he said.

“I don’t know who was the original recipient of the drawing, but I think she’s expected them to get it reframed at some point and to have come across it as a gift.”

He added: “Who knows - it’s very difficult to tell.”

The value of Eardley artwork increased recently following the first major exhibition of her work in almost 20 years, which was held at the National Gallery of Scotland in Edinburgh last year.

The artist was born in England and moved to Glasgow when she was 19.

She became famous for her oil paintings of children who played in the streets - usually depicted against a chalk graffiti-ed working class backdrop .

In her later years, Eardley moved to Catterline, just south of Aberdeen, where she painted landscapes.

She died from breast cancer in 1963 at the age of 42.

Original Pooh sketch under hammer

November 4th, 2008 by admin

Original Pooh sketch under hammer

E.H. Shepard's sketch of Pooh bear

A section of EH Shepard’s illustration, Tiggers don’t like honey

An original sketch of favourite AA Milne character Winnie the Pooh, featuring Tigger and Piglet, is expected to fetch £20,000 at auction.

The pencil drawing of the bear dipping a paw in a honey pot is being sold at Bonhams auction rooms in London by the family of the artist, EH Shepard.

A specialist at Bonhams said it would appeal to five generations of readers.

The sale on Tuesday also includes a first sketch for Kenneth Grahame’s story The Wind in the Willows.

The pencil drawing shows Rat and Mole having a picnic on a river bank, and is expected to make around £10,000.

The Pooh stories are timeless because they’re not laden with morality
Luke Batterham
Bonhams

It appeared in the published book with the caption “Now pitch in, old fellow! And the Mole was indeed very glad to obey”.

The oval drawing of Pooh is an enlarged and expanded version of the illustration “Tiggers don’t like honey” used in The house at Pooh Corner.

Bonhams’ book specialist Luke Batterham told BBC News the Pooh stories are timeless because they are not “laden with morality like many childrens’ tales”.

Shepard's sketch for The Wind in the Willows

Rat and Mole have a picnic in Grahame’s The Wind in the Willows

He said: “The illustrations are essential. Visually, that’s what is kept in people’s imaginations.

“The images are constantly in the public’s mind because of all the spin-offs, but you can’t beat the original drawings.”

He added that the original books have “outlived” and “defeated” the Disney versions of the story.

Other Shepard illustrations up for sale include two pencil sketches for Milne’s poem Buckingham Palace, published in 1924.

In one, Christopher Robin salutes a palace guard; the other shows him holding hands with Alice.

‘Oldest Hebrew script’ is found

October 31st, 2008 by admin
‘Oldest Hebrew script’ is found

Five lines of ancient script on a shard of pottery could be the oldest example of Hebrew writing ever discovered, an archaeologist in Israel says.

The shard was found by a teenage volunteer during a dig about 20km (12 miles) south-west of Jerusalem.

Experts at Hebrew University said dating showed it was written 3,000 years ago - about 1,000 years earlier than the Dead Sea Scrolls.

Other scientists cautioned that further study was needed to understand it.

Preliminary investigations since the shard was found in July have deciphered some words, including judge, slave and king.

The characters are written in proto-Canaanite, a precursor of the Hebrew alphabet.

King David

Lead archaeologist Yosef Garfinkel identified it as Hebrew because of a three-letter verb meaning “to do” which he said was only used in Hebrew.

“That leads us to believe that this is Hebrew, and that this is the oldest Hebrew inscription that has been found,” he said.

The shard and other artefacts were found at the site of Khirbet Qeiyafa, overlooking the Valley of Elah where the Bible says the Israelite David fought the Philistine giant Goliath.

Mr Garfinkel said the findings could shed significant light on the period of King David’s reign.

“The chronology and geography of Khirbet Qeiyafa create a unique meeting point between the mythology, history, historiography and archaeology of King David.”

But his colleagues at Hebrew University said the Israelites were not the only ones using proto-Canaanite characters, therefore making it difficult to prove it was Hebrew and not a related tongue spoken in the area at the time.

Hebrew University archaeologist Amihai Mazar said the inscription was “very important”, as it is the longest proto-Canaanite text ever found.

“The differentiation between the scripts, and between the languages themselves in that period, remains unclear,” he said.

Classics of everyday design No 54

October 31st, 2008 by admin

Classics of everyday design No 54

Celebrating its 100th anniversary, the tube roundel is an ever-evolving yet reassuringly constant symbol of life in modern London

In pictures: A century of the tube logo

London underground
Happy birthday … the tube logo has been a familiar part of London life for 100 years. Photograph: PA

The London Transport roundel is one of the earliest, best, most familiar and enduring of all corporate logos. It’s been around in one guise or another for exactly 100 years ago this autumn, when the various privately owned Underground railway companies decided to merge their identities for the convenience of the millions of passengers who travelled on their trains every day.

The first roundel logo, known as the “bullseye” or “target”, consisted of a solid red disc crossed, at its equator, with a blue bar on which the name of the station was written in somewhat clumsy white sans-serif lettering. Frank Pick [1878-1941], commercial and publicity manager of the London Underground Group of Companies knew that the symbol was a good one, but not good enough. He liked the contemporary YMCA logo, which used a triangle, voids and a crossbar, and began toying with his own designs for an improved “bullseye” and the lettering to go with it. A highly cultured businessman with the sharpest of eyes, Pick was, however, neither an artist nor a typographer. The problem was resolved when he was introduced to Edward Johnston [1872-1944], the brilliant arts and crafts calligrapher, who turned the 1908 “bullseye” into a strikingly handsome and wholly convincing symbol by 1917.

Johnston worked on the design over a number of years, and had perfected its balance and proportions by the time the architect Charles Holden began incorporating it into the distinctive Underground stations he designed from the 1920s, including the brilliant Arnos Grove and Southgate Piccadilly Line stations of the early 1930s.

As for lettering, Johnston designed his superb sans-serif capitals for Pick between 1913 and 1916. This was eventually conjured into a typeface, and was to inspire such classic modern types as Gill Sans and many of the best German and Swiss designs of the 1920s and 30s.

By the time Pick was managing director and chief executive of the London Passenger Transport Board, a public corporation formed in 1933 that brought pretty much all public transport operations in London under the umbrella of a single controlling organisation, the Johnston logo was truly ubiquitous. And the LPTB learned to relax. Artists designing posters and publicity material played creatively with the logo under Pick’s benign direction. It might pop up as the wheels of a stylised bus, the head of a rushing commuter, a planet (as in Man Ray’s famous 1938 poster) or even a flying saucer.

The talented German graphic designer Hans Schleger [1898-1970] designed a simplified “bullseye” for a new generation of modern London Transport bus stops in 1935, while the proportions of the Johnston logo were significantly altered in 1972, by the Design Research Unit led by Misha Black, as part of a complete overhaul of London Transport’s corporate identity. This is when the logo was named the roundel.

Further changes were by Henrion, Ludlow and Schmidt in 1984, and a New Johnston typeface designed to accompany it. By this time, detailed guides laying down the law as to how and when to use company typefaces and logos were very much the norm across industries worldwide. Although polished, the sense of adventure and even fun nurtured by Frank Pick all those decades ago were beginning to be lost. So, it’s good to see Art on the Underground commissioning 100 contemporary artists to make new works of art inspired by a century of the “bullseye” and “roundel”. These will be on display at the A Foundation Gallery at the Rochelle School, Arnold Circus, London, from October 9-30 2008. A selection of the works will be mass-produced as posters for display throughout the Underground network.

The roundel is a fine example of a logo or corporate symbol that has evolved over a long time while remaining one of the most effective, and popular, in use anywhere in the world today. The fact that it enters its second century in the spirit of creative art would have pleased its original creators no end. Pick wanted London’s public transport system to be as much a work of civic art, and an inspiration everyone using it, as a quick, cheap and reliable method of getting from A to B - or, indeed, Amersham to Brixton.


Obituary-Miles Richmond

October 16th, 2008 by admin

Miles Richmond

Artist for whom imagination linked the philosopher’s view with the painter’s

At the age of 70, the artist Miles Richmond found himself back at Borough Polytechnic in Southwark, south London. It was 1992, and the poly was celebrating both its centenary and its elevation as South Bank University. When he was an art student there half a century earlier, Richmond had painted the view of London from a college rooftop. Now he had been invited back to do it again, as a mural.

Every morning he would arrive and shin up a vertical steel ladder to the rooftop with his easel, paints, brushes and turps strapped to his back, and a bottle of drinking water; no food. He would stay up there all day painting. He was never exactly loquacious, but the staff who encountered him took to him for his unassuming modesty, his 36ft-wide mural that seemed an accretion of the city’s history, with the great river winding through like a timeline, and because he was the new university’s link with the illustrious past when the great painter David Bomberg had taught there.

In the 1940s, Richmond, who has died aged 85, had been a pupil of Bomberg, an inspirational teacher and hugely innovative but neglected painter. Yet at Borough Road, where Bomberg taught because no one else would have him, he was a talisman. Among his other young pupils, moonlighting from more famous colleges, were Frank Auerbach, Leon Kossoff and Dennis Creffield. The first two have become famous, Creffield less so, but Richmond, born a decade earlier, suffered as much neglect as Bomberg, without the preliminary sunburst of fame.

He was born Peter Richmond in Isleworth, Middlesex. In the 1980s he added Miles to his given names and became Miles Peter Richmond, known as Miles. His father was an Admiralty engineer and his mother a singer. In 1940 he went to study at Kingston upon Thames school of art, and later in the second world war, as a conscientious objector, worked on the land, while his brothers served in the armed forces. His father disapproved of his actions, and his intimates felt later that the crisis of conscience this caused Richmond was at least partly responsible for the palpable emotional depth and passion of his paintings.

In 1946 he heard about Bomberg’s classes and moved to London to take part. Bomberg taught the view of the 18th-century philosopher Bishop Berkeley that visual perception was a snare and a delusion. This is not a promising starting point for a painter and Richmond adapted it to the view that the imagination was the intermediary between the philosopher’s view and the painter’s.

Bomberg had written: “We conceive of art as the density of cosmic forces compressed into a small space.” Already in the 1940s Richmond was producing uningratiating and unremittingly tough paintings and, especially, drawings of great mass, density and weight. It was an art that drew on the earliest cubist explorations of the first decade of the 20th century, and beyond that, Cézanne; Richmond’s own paintings are so packed within their narrow confines that they look as though they are carved from rock.

With other Bomberg disciples, in 1947 Richmond founded the Borough Group, which held several exhibitions, some including Bomberg’s own work, up until 1952, at which point Richmond left with his first wife Susanna for Aix-en-Provence. The following year they moved on to the ancient town of Ronda in Andalusia, where Bomberg was running his own art school. Richmond joined him in teaching in this place where the town and its rugged mountain setting were perfectly adapted to his way of looking.

After Bomberg’s death in 1957, Richmond taught at the International School in Spain with Harry Thubron, another painter and inspirational teacher who had taken British art education out of the academy, as it were, and placed it in the workshop, giving pupils imaginative settings for life drawing but teaching them how to use lathes and carpenters’ tools as well.

In these years Richmond moved frequently between Spain and England, continuing to exchange ideas with Thubron, and in the 1970s he found that his work had taken the long route through drawing to the discovery of light and colour. It is probably no coincidence that one of this new sequence of paintings is called The Red Studio, the very title Matisse used in 1911 for one of the most important breakthrough paintings of the age, in which colour gives the impression of both light and spatial depth. Richmond had moved to London and was working in a studio in Camden Town; in his telling, he painted non-stop for three days, during which he experienced a quasi-mystical experience when he seemed to travel through the sun; as he emerged, he heard a voice saying, “Now you are connected.”

Back with us on planet earth, Richmond worked in the north-east of England, in Whitby, Richmond, and at Rievaulx, the haunts of the old Romantic painters of the 19th century, and some others which were not, like Hartlepool and, the town where he was based at the end of his life, Middlesbrough. He carried with him to the grave the reputation of remaining a follower of Bomberg, and for the promoters of fashion and fortune in art there is no future in being behind. That is the modern heresy, but without fame or fortune Miles Richmond’s work rises above it.

His first wife Susanna and their four children, Georgina, James, Philip and Robert, survive him, as does his second wife, Miranda, and their two children, Zoe and Jerome.
Michael McNay

John Berger writes: Shortly before his death, Miles asked me to write something about the exhibition that is due to open at the Boundary Gallery, north London, on November 7.

Dear Miles,

It’s good people are coming here to watch your paintings and drawings. I say watch rather than look at because they are so full of movement. Like watching a bird cross the sky, or an animal making its way to its lair.

I want to share with you a recent experience. A few weeks ago the Palestinian poet Mahmoud Darwish died. I was expecting to meet him on an already planned visit to Ramallah. As things turned out, we visited - several times - his grave.

A few days after receiving the unexpected news of his death I was seized by a desire to draw something for him. To draw ears of wheat - which feature in one of his great poems - and some flowers. As I drew the grains and the petals, they became words and phrases transported from his poems. The same pen with the same ink on the absorbent Japanese paper drew plants and wrote words at the same time.

Meanings and forms became interchangeable. They were twins born of the timeless intelligence which is inherent in every thing which is alive, and which grows and dies.

One day I’ll become what I want.

One day I will become a thought

that no sword or book can dispatch to

the wasteland

A thought equal to rain on the

mountain split open by a blade of grass.

You have spent your life, Miles, looking for and recording those mountains, those rains, those blades.

Darwish’s verse ends with these two lines:

where power will not triumph

and justice is not fugitive.

• Miles (Peter) Richmond, artist, born December 19 1922; died October 7 2008

Michelangelo’s famous statue of David could collapse because of its exposure to mass tourism, Italian experts say.

September 20th, 2008 by admin
Michelangelo’s David ‘may crack’

By Mark Duff
BBC News, Milan

Michelangelo’s famous statue of David could collapse because of its exposure to mass tourism, Italian experts say.

They say the massive statue of the naked boy-warrior is in danger because of its size, shape and the weakness of the marble from which it was carved.

But they warn that the greatest risk comes from the footfall of many visitors who troop past it each day at Florence’s Galleria dell’Accademia.

The experts want to protect the statue by insulating it from the vibrations.

This would cost about 1m euros (£785,000). Otherwise David could topple over, engineers from the University of Perugia say.

Iconic status

The warning follows a detailed study of the statue which showed that the cracks filled during major restoration works four years ago - on the occasion of its 500th anniversary - have already reopened.

That restoration was itself controversial because it involved using distilled water to clean the statue - which critics argued could damage it.

Michelangelo’s David has had iconic status almost since its completion at the height of the Renaissance.

At the time it was seen as a powerful symbol of Florence’s republican political ideals: David being the youthful warrior who felled the mighty Goliath in the Biblical Old Testament story.

Since then it has enjoyed mixed fortunes: attacked by crowds when it was first displayed, then hacked by a deranged painter in 1991.

The statue has also acquired kitsch status - its copies adorn everything from casinos in Las Vegas to tacky Mediterranean beach bars.

Gold statue created of model Moss

August 28th, 2008 by admin
Gold statue created of model Moss

A £1.5m solid gold sculpture has been made of supermodel Kate Moss as part of a British Museum exhibition.

Entitled Siren, the 50kg statue was made by Marc Quinn, who described Moss as “the ideal beauty of the moment”.

His previous work included the marble sculpture Alison Lapper Pregnant, which appeared in Trafalgar Square.

The gold artwork will be exhibited with statues by other contemporary artists, including Damien Hirst and Antony Gormley, at the central London museum.

Mr Quinn previously created a bronze sculpture of Moss in a yoga pose, which was painted white and entitled Sphinx.

The museum has only revealed a close-up section of the new statue, which is also thought to depict Moss in a yoga pose.

‘Live up to image’

He also made Self, a bust of his own head created from eight pints of his frozen blood.

His statue of Ms Lapper naked, who was born with no arms and shortened legs, was on Trafalgar Square’s fourth plinth for 20 months.

Describing the gold statue of Moss, Mr Quinn said: “I thought the next thing to do would be to make a sculpture of the person who’s the ideal beauty of the moment.

“But even Kate Moss doesn’t live up to the image.”

The exhibition, entitled Statuephilia, will also feature 200 plastic skulls by Damien Hirst.

Antony Gormley’s Case for an Angel 1, a smaller precursor to his Angel of the North sculpture which overlooks the A1 in Gateshead, will also go on display.

Statues by artists Ron Mueck, Tim Noble and Sue Webster will also appear in the exhibition.

Co-curator Waldemar Januszczak said: “The British Museum helped to make these artists what they are. Now they are seeking to return the favour.”

The exhibition opens on 4 October.

Published: 2008/08/28 07:08:05 GMT

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