LEGACY: PHOTOGRAPHS BY VANESSA BELL AND PATTI SMITH / CREATIVE NEW YEAR FOR CROYDON’S YOUNG PEOPLE
PHOTOGRAPHS BY VANESSA BELL AND PATTI SMITH
8 February – 4 June 2017
Dulwich Picture Gallery will present the first photography display bringing together work by the British modern artist, Vanessa Bell and the American musician, writer and artist, Patti Smith.‘Legacy: Photographs by Vanessa Bell and Patti Smith’, which coincides with the Gallery’s major retrospective of Vanessa Bell’s work, will include 17 photographs by Smith and a selection of Bell’s photo albums, displayed publicly for the first time. It couples two artists both known for their pioneering creative drive and defiance of social mores, showcasing two different but compatible artistic visions.
Smith has long been drawn to the work and lives of the Bloomsbury Group, finding inspiration and solace in the rural retreats of these forward-thinking artists and thinkers. Charleston, Bell’s farmhouse on the Sussex Downs, where she lived with her life companion Duncan Grant, and the neighboring Monk’s House, home of Virginia and Leonard Woolf, both became sites of pilgrimage for Smith. The display will include a selection of Smith’s black and white photographs, the product of her residency at Charleston in 2003, which capture the lingering remnants of Bell’s life and chart Smith’s ongoing artistic response to the Bloomsbury group.
Commenting on Charleston, Smith said:
“Art was a part of everyday living. Their cups and saucers were designed by themselves, their utensils, the wallpaper, tapestries. When I first came here I found it just like home […] I felt a real longing to document this place in the same manner that I document my own home because it is very much how I live: books everywhere, things that seem very humble, very sacred, a simple wooden box, a shell, a paint tube – everything has significance.”
On display with Smith’s photographs will be seven of Bell’s photograph albums, generously loaned from the Tate Archives, that were carefully compiled by Bell during her lifetime. Bell took pictures from her earliest days – some of the photographs date from her youth at St Ives, where her family spent their summers. Others depict her own young family, her husband Clive Bell and lover Duncan Grant, and the circle of leading intellectuals and artists that surrounded them. The selection also offers an insight into Bell’s working process, illuminating how she used the camera to inform her paintings and providing an intimate glimpse of the Bloomsbury members behind closed doors.
“In our display, these photographs and their makers will be able to speak to each other across the years” says curator Sarah Milroy. “Bell and Smith are both free spirits that challenged the times they lived in, and epitomised the ideal of creative freedom. We look forward to their conversation.”
While Smith’s photographs depict places abandoned to the forces of time, Bell’s teem with a host of characters, captured by her sharp eye and framed by her keen compositional instincts. Seen together, these images offer a present and past reflection on Charleston and Bloomsbury, suggesting a lineage of free thought and female creativity that continues to this day. (Source: Dulwich Picture Gallery press release)
CREATIVE NEW YEAR FOR CROYDON’S YOUNG PEOPLE
Two new projects designed to let young people unleash their creativity are being launched in the New Year by the council’s youth team.
‘Think it, film it’ and ‘creative art nights’ both take place at the Samuel Coleridge Taylor Centre, 192 Selhurst Road, South Norwood.
The filming sessions are for young people who are interested in working either in front of or behind the camera. Over the course of three months there will be chances to create anything from documentaries and music videos to comedies and films. The motto is, if you think it you can film it.
The ‘creative art nights’, will allow people to spend 10 weeks exploring the possibilities of using mixed media and street art techniques to produce works that will be part of an Easter exhibition.
Cllr Timothy Godfrey, Croydon’s cabinet member for culture, leisure and sport, said: “I’m really excited by these sessions as they are a great way of allowing young people to explore and develop their natural talents and skills and find new ways of expressing their creative ideas”
Sessions are held every Wednesday from 5-7pm starting on 11 January 2017 and running until 22 March (with a break at half term on 15 Feb).
Places are limited, so to book a slot e-mail either [email protected] or [email protected] (Source: Croydon council press release)