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Viewing Wang Guangle: Faded Colours
Above Wang Guangle: Faded Colours
Above Wang Guangle: Faded Colours
Above Wang Guangle: Faded Colours
Above Wang Guangle: Faded Colours
1 April – 4 May 2022
Pace, London
https://www.pacegallery.com/exhibitions/wang-guangle-faded-colours
Meditative and powerful, with echoes of Rothko in the technique, Wang Guangle’s abstract paintings demand slow viewing. One of China’s preeminent contemporary abstract painters, Guangle has developed a singular artistic practice over the past two decades, working to interpret his classical painting training into a new, abstract style. Now the subject of his solo exhibition at Pace — his second in London — the works reflect Guangle’s interest in using the painting process to translate an abstract sense of time and death into a tangible experience.
Repetition is key to this practice, as Guangle systematically layers acrylic paint over the canvas to create enigmatic colour gradations and textured surfaces, in a meditative process that reflectsEastern spiritual practices. The works in Faded Colours reflect two different approaches — one sees Guangle use a horizontal style that echo moments in time such as the blurring of mist and fog or the fall of dusk, while the other sees him move gradually and evenly towards the centre until he creates a a trapezoid, challenging the two-dimensionality of the painting.
Beautiful at first sight, with so much more to see with closer inspection, Guangle’s show is not to be missed.
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Dates
01 April 2022 — 04 May 2022
Viewing PAD Paris
Above PAD Paris
Above Karry Berreby Jewelry
Above Chair by Nakashima. Courtesy Galerie Alexandre Guillemain
Above PAD Paris
Above Karry Berreby Jewelry
Above Chair by Nakashima. Courtesy Galerie Alexandre Guillemain
5 – 10 April 2022
Jardin des Tuileries
https://www.padesignart.com/paris/en/
Design lovers, rejoice! PAD Paris is landing in the Jardin des Tuileries next week, bringing with it the best international and French galleries to show off their top selection of historical, modern and contemporary design.
Since its launch in 1998, PAD has become a leading fair in the design space, with a tempting selection of antique and contemporary design and furniture from the world’s top collectors and galleries. In between perusing the fine selection, take a break with lunch at the site’s Elle Deco cafe, whose tranquil, jute canvas-covered interiors have been designed by Sandra Benhamou. For those who can’t make it to Paris, fear not — PAD London will land in Berkeley Square in October.
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Dates
05 April 2022 — 10 April 2022
Viewing Radio Ballads
Above Helen Cammock, There’s A Hole in the Sky Part 1, 2016, HD Video
Above Rory Pilgrim, The Resounding Bell HD Video, 2019 courtesy South London Gallery and andriesse-eyck galerie
Above 2019 Helen Cammock, Over-Sensitive from And There’s Something About a Mountain, Lino print, 2016
Above
Above Helen Cammock, There’s A Hole in the Sky Part 1, 2016, HD Video
Above Rory Pilgrim, The Resounding Bell HD Video, 2019 courtesy South London Gallery and andriesse-eyck galerie
Above 2019 Helen Cammock, Over-Sensitive from And There’s Something About a Mountain, Lino print, 2016
31 March – 29 May 2022
Serpentine
https://www.serpentinegalleries.org/whats-on/radio-ballads/
Amplifying the voices of those who are so often overlooked, the Serpentine Gallery’s latest exhibition is a multi-layered affair featuring works by some of today’s most exciting artistic talent, including Sonia Boyce, who is set to be the first Black woman to represent the UK at the Venice Biennale, Turner Prize-winning Helen Cammock, Prix de Rome winner Rory Pilgrim, and Stanley Picker Fellow Ilona Sagar.
Inspired by the anniversary of the 1970 Equal Pay Act and the momentum for change created by the Dagenham Ford sewing machinists strike of 1968, the works featured are the result of a special program that saw the boundary-pushing artists paired with core social care services and community settings across Barking and Dagenham over the past three years. The result is a poignant and evocative body of work that opens up conversations around mental health, social care and politics, with each artist’s project displayed across the Serpentine and Barking Town Hall and Learning Centre.