Whistler can be as difficult to pin down as the butterfly he adopted in his monogram. It makes him fascinating and frustrating in equal measure and the same could be said of Tate's once in a generation exhibition. It begins with a painting, a larger than life reproduction of the same painting and a mirror. Too tricksy by half. A pet annoyance of mine is the use of large scale reproductions in big, expensively priced shows when you've paid to see the real thing. If your pulling power is not sufficient to get a particular work then find a substitute (the Peacock Room recreation here is an exception). If you can’t make original artworks sufficiently interesting as a curator then you're in the wrong job. At best it looks like a gimmicky space filler, at worst it appears lazy. Here, with the original hanging alongside, it is just bewildering. You can make a strong case that Artist in his Studio is Whistler 101 and I’ve heard Carol Jacobi do this very effectively: him at his easel, models including one in white, Japanese objects, vacant mirror, all riffing off Velazquez but translucent, inconsequential and uncertain. The painting says it all so why is it not allowed just to speak.
artlife
Sunday, June 7, 2026
James McNeill Whistler (Tate Britain until September 27 2026)
Whistler can be as difficult to pin down as the butterfly he adopted in his monogram. It makes him fascinating and frustrating in equal measure and the same could be said of Tate's once in a generation exhibition. It begins with a painting, a larger than life reproduction of the same painting and a mirror. Too tricksy by half. A pet annoyance of mine is the use of large scale reproductions in big, expensively priced shows when you've paid to see the real thing. If your pulling power is not sufficient to get a particular work then find a substitute (the Peacock Room recreation here is an exception). If you can’t make original artworks sufficiently interesting as a curator then you're in the wrong job. At best it looks like a gimmicky space filler, at worst it appears lazy. Here, with the original hanging alongside, it is just bewildering. You can make a strong case that Artist in his Studio is Whistler 101 and I’ve heard Carol Jacobi do this very effectively: him at his easel, models including one in white, Japanese objects, vacant mirror, all riffing off Velazquez but translucent, inconsequential and uncertain. The painting says it all so why is it not allowed just to speak.
Sunday, May 3, 2026
Michaelina Wautier (Royal Academy until June 21 2026)
It is rare and marvellous to go to an exhibition and be truly astonished. In three rooms at the Royal Academy, Michaelina Wautier blew me away. The rediscovery of women artists has become a pretty commonplace occurrence: since the National Gallery brought us Artemisia Gentileschi during the depths of Covid, we've had Lavinia Fontana in Dublin, Rachel Ruysch touring Europe, to name a few. In most cases, one has a vague sense of the artist involved, but Michaelina Wautier has literally appeared out of nowhere. She will perhaps never reach the popular heights of Gentileschi - there are fewer works, less provocative subject matter and no dramatic biography. But purely in terms of paint on canvas, she is head and shoulders above the rest.
We know virtually nothing about Wautier. Her life is largely a mystery, her training unrecorded, her later years a blank. The works which exist come from a limited time period of about ten years. The anchor is her brother Charles, a fellow artist and collaborator, who shared a studio, but who, on the evidence of the works here, was less talented as a painter. Without Charles, one might speculate, Wautier herself might never have practiced, never have achieved the commissions and success and independence. He provided respectability without the ties and responsibility which marriage would have carried (one thinks of Judith Leyster who effectively gave up her career after her wedding). Wautier also had a good patron, here represented in a Daniel Teniers portrait which seems especially chosen to show how average painters could be. Archduke Leopold was clearly a big fan and again, perhaps without his backing she might never have been able to paint the range and scale of subjects which she did.
For the extraordinary thing about Wautier is that, at a time when women artists were not as uncommon as we sometimes like to think, but were largely restricted to floral and still life subjects, she consistently broke the mould. There are two of her flower paintings in the show, paltry things, as if she is going through the motions. Wautier had bigger fish to fry: portraiture, religion and mythology. Even when she turned her hand to more female-friendly genre subjects, she went her own way: the Five Senses are big-eyed, curly-locked, elegant boys, not cheeky lads, not pretty girls. They live and breath on the canvas, rounded individuals with wild hair and expressive hands - two Wautier characteristics - who bring humour, pathos and energy.
From the freshly-scrubbed girlishness of Mary, wide-eyed and eager with her book in the Education of the Virgin to the well-worn wrinkles of her St Joseph and St Joachim, Wautier paints real, believable people. They are brought alive by brushwork which ripples across the canvas, not showily virtuoso in an Hals-ian way but naturally energised as if caught in the act of almost-movement. She has a knack with gesture and angled poses which add to that sense of casual immediacy. St John the Evangelist, intense in his emotion and unconventional in his looks, epitomises her ability to create a narrative and psychological hinterland. Cropped, against a dark background, his one visible eye shines with passionate, hopeless devotion, his long fingers cradling the chalice with tender passion.
It is extraordinary how quickly Wautier gets there. The first room of portraits, including that of herself, are quietly impressive but unspectacular. She comes across as coolly competent, with her unprimed canvas and limited palette. The fabric of her Sunday best dress is beautifully rendered, her features starkly lit as she stares off into the distance: she hold sup well against the Rubens next door but it is all a little safe. The early Portrait of a Military Commander has more depth of character. The crumpled features of a well-lived life could have been painted by William Dobson, but there is wariness and weariness too in that intensely illuminated face.
The show ends too soon, with the Triumph of Bacchus, big and bold and full of ebullient good humour. The central figure, all flesh, indolence and absurdity in his wheelbarrow chariot is one of the great representations of the god. I am not fully convinced about her presence in the form the bare-breasted figure of the right. Would Wautier really show herself like that, suffering some lecherous fondling as she looks out with a 'we've all been there girls' look. I think there might be some wishful thinking among art historians brought up on #MeToo and Gentileschi. Does it matter? This is a triumph of a painting by any standards, and a triumph of a show
Sunday, April 19, 2026
'In Bloom: How Plants Changed Our World' (Ashmolean Museum, Oxford until August 16 2026)
The Ashmolean's In Bloom exhibition might be better titled 'How we changed the plants' world.' Current art history has an obsession with ecologies, extinctions and extractions and the curators spend a great deal of time and energy banging on about exploitation, with annoyingly generalised hand-wringing. Plants have changed our world in a myriad of positive ways , yet there is virtually nothing here about medicinal plants, about how other cultures use plants, about how plants have always had deeply symbolic meanings, about how they have been used as dyes, or indeed their fundamental importance as a basic source of food. The emphasis instead is on our (Western/ European) negative impact, both on the natural world and on indigenous cultures. I am obviously not disputing that this is the case, nor am I saying it is not worthy of discussion, but the curators' narrow reluctance to concede anything else is frustrating and strangely at odds with both their chosen subtitle, and with many of the objects which are on display.
Because the first thing to acknowledge is that this is a strikingly beautiful exhibition. The opening room cocoons you within green walls, garlanded with painted flora; the large middle space is high, light and swathed in suspended draperies creating a rainforest-like canopy with a subtle soundscape of birds and water to match. You leave through large scale contemporary works of immersive colour as if you are in the world's most beautiful garden, although one seen, in Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg's works, through the eyes of pollinating insects. I am not a fan of the current fashion for scent-scapes and the opportunity to stick your nose into various odours here seems like a crude gimmick in the midst of all these sumptuous visuals.
The objects themselves are also stunning. Excellent lighting elevates that most mundane of genres, still life, so the blooms have a tactile intensity and you can get nose-close and see water droplets, veining and insects. Rachel Ruysch's red poppies sing out of the darkness in a tumbling, characterful cascade: there is nothing still about this and it is full of life. There is a brief discussion about changing fashions in flower painting, but I wanted to know so much more, and it was, as so often the case with the labelling here, not followed through. Floral art does not begin and end in seventeenth century Holland; what about some eighteenth century French examples or indeed other nineteenth century artists? Fantin Latour appears only to illustrate the Victorians' rose-mania rather than to show shifting aesthetic attitudes to flowers. Alma Tadema's poster-girl feels like it was included because they wanted some more conventional paintings.
The oils are isolated examples, but the core of the exhibition are scientific and observational drawings. These are exquisite, always worth showcasing, but in themselves potentially repetitive. There is an odd disconnect between celebrating their draughtsmanship whilst at the same time using the drawings as illustrations of exploitation and colonialism. Again there is a tentative mention of changing tastes - the increasing inclusion of birds and wider ecologies - but too often the drawings are treated as nothing more than impeccable illustrations of a politicised point. More unusual and interesting are the three-dimensional models of plants used as teaching aids: they sit in (unfortunately indirect) dialogue with Anahita Norouzi's striking black irises in the final room.
Other objects have curiosity value: the Wardian chest for transporting specimens, vulanised rubber mourning jewellery, an opium pipe. We get snapshot stories which seem to leave too many gaps. Rubber trees, native to South America, were imported to South East Asia, yet this is not linked to other and continuingly destructive monocultures. Tea is discussed but sugar is ignored. A decision to take John Tradescant, whose collection effectively launched the Ashmolean, as a starting point means that previous plant movements (by the Romans, or tobacco from North America) are not mentioned.
Equally, and again here I take issue with the subtitle, this is an exhibition about men (and a few women) as much as about plants. We begin with portraits of the Tradescants and there are a succession of explorers, botanists, collectors and scientists who are name checked, from Carl Linnaeus strutting his stuff in Sami costume to the Duchess of Beaufort willfully imposing her global plant collection on the English countryside. This is a show which doesn't need people: plants have enough character of their own, from the papery fragility of centuries old flower-pressings to the full-blown blousy eroticism of orchids.
I set high standards for Ashmolean exhibitions and was hoping In Bloom would be a repeat of their wonderful Colour Revolution which was packed with interesting tit-bits and beautiful objects. There is beauty aplenty here, but In Bloom has the constrained artificiality of a parterre on which the curators have imposed their plan rather than the organic and productive abundance of a cottage garden. One can effectively illustrate colonial exploitation and endangered nature without writing it into every label: indeed the final display allows contemporary artists to do both with far more elegance and bite than any of the previous pieces of text.
Sunday, March 15, 2026
Gwen John: Strange Beauties (National Museum, Cardiff until June 28 2026)
Small is big in Gwen John's work. None of her canvases are very large and many of her watercolours are tiny. The range of themes which interested her was limited. She painted the same subject repeatedly with subtle differences. The curators of Strange Beauties, who lean heavily into her spirituality and conversion to Catholicism, highlight her adherence to St. Thérèse of Lisieux's Little Way. 'Smallness' and religion may seem off-putting, but John was neither restrictive nor ascetic. She went to church to sketch as much as to pray, and it was painting itself which drove her with an intense but almost scientific determination to explore the medium and the subject. Across a patchwork of watercolour squares you see notes and coded numbering as she applied and recorded new colour combinations. And the more you look at a line of superficially repetitive figures, the more you meditate on the small but deeply significant compositional and structural differences.
This is a big show of small works - nearly 200 of them - their lack of scale perhaps unhelpfully emphasised by the soaring height of the galleries at Cardiff's National Museum. Unlike the recent Pallant House/ Holburne exhibition, which focused on a limited period, this is a full-blown retrospective, although, partly because of the nature of John's work, much of it will seem familiar to anyone who saw Alicia Foster's 2024 curation. Cardiff takes a broadly chronological but defiantly un-biographical stance. John's early life in Tenby and her Slade years are handled with barely a passing mention of Augustus, her more flamboyant and originally more famous brother. Sometimes, this approach verges on the coy, when brushing aside her 'romance' with Auguste Rodin, or her close friendships with women. Even for someone who dislikes the usual curatorial insistence on biography, there is an annoying inability to pin down Gwen John as a person, beyond the fact that she clearly did not want to be known.
Arguably, the most revealing self-image shows John drawing herself, standing naked in front of the mirror, sketchbook awkwardly balanced in her outstretched arm. It is entirely without artifice, embarrassment or allure, an academic exercise such as she was taught at the Slade, conveniently and cheaply reenacted in her own room. This steely self-reliance is everywhere, from the astonishing decision to walk to Rome with her friend Dorelia, to her independent existence in Paris and her unsentimental description of World War One bombs. It is also front and centre of every single painting she did of a female figure (and she virtually never painted men): that inscrutable distance, the centered introversion. You could put a wimple of any of them and they would be plausible nuns.
The early portraits are the most individualised: Chloe Boughton-Leigh, bony and crumpled; Mrs Atkinson, Dickensian in her sallow-skinned shapelessness, Fenella Lovell sullenly defiant as she poses clothed and nude, but they all share that otherworldly disconnection. These are people John knows well, counts as friends, yet she retains a disinterested eye, treating them as flesh and blood still lifes, convenient vehicles through which to explore paint. Her experimentalism is dealt with too cursorily here. Her use of chalky grounds to dry pigments, her single layer brushstrokes which led to whole canvases being abandoned for a single misstep, the rigidly imposed restrictions on colour. These details are perhaps difficult to convey in exhibition labelling. But get up close to any of her works and the surface is alive with texture, the paint taking on a granular, almost sculptural solidity.
The most successful section allows her church watercolours to speak for themselves in a cacophonous choir. Bizarrely the greens and purples and candid camera poses remind me of Toulouse Lautrec's nightclub scenes, all chaotic conversation and crowded composition rather than religion. It is, however, difficult to escape a sense of tailing off, an ever-decreasing-circles reductionism. The works generally get smaller. John appears to get less satisfied with her art the more she pushes the boundaries, and the final room with its unconvincing sketchy landscapes feels downbeat. It is worth returning to the two centrally placed versions of Pilgrim which bestride the gallery with weight and purpose. They have the presence of Medieval saints, timelessly clad yet distinctly modern, painted almost entirely in blue like a Whistlerian homage yet with none of his hazy ambivalence. John reminds me of her contemporary Helen Schjerbeck, currently on show in New York. They are both almost too idiosyncratic (always seen as a bad trait in a woman) for their own good.
Cardiff is the obvious place to hold this retrospective: the National Museum has the largest collection of John's works in the world, currently over 900 items, and many of the pieces here have rarely been seen in public. The exhibition is travelling to Edinburgh later this year and then on to Yale Center for British Art and the National Museum for Women in the Arts in Washington: a proper tour which will surely bolster John's status on both sides of the Atlantic. So, this is by any measure an impressive exhibition. My fear, however, is that it reinforces cliches about John's art, rather than challenging them. Those who have already decided that she is cold, limited and essentially too gendered (a sad cat lady) will not find much to change their opinion; fans will love it. As for those discovering the artist for the first time, John requires thought and close looking. Small things come to those who wait.
Tuesday, March 10, 2026
'The Rossettis Siblings and Spouses' (Wightwick Manor, Wolverhampton until November 2026)
Wightwick Manor ought to be a recognised halt on the Pre-Raphaelite pilgrimage trail, but perhaps because of its inauspicious location on the outskirts of Wolverhampton, perhaps because has been subsumed into the National Trust portfolio, it is not as well known as it should be. A beautifully intact Arts and Crafts house, it boasts a superb carved timber exterior and interior rooms decorated with Morris and Co wallpaper and stained glass. However, it is the art collection massed by paint magnate Sir Geoffrey Mander and his wife which is the real draw. Now, the National Trust have raided their store and produced an exhibition of works by the Rossettis, Siblings and Spouses. It should be a treat but although there are plenty of individual treasures, the overall show is less than the sum of its parts.
The major problem is one of display. The exhibition sprawls through the house with screens in front of other objects and little sense of cohesion. The house itself is cluttered, dark and domestic - a perfect, cosy House Beautiful but not ideal as an exhibition space. The National Trust are not keen on labels at the best of times: visitors are usually reliant on effusive volunteer guides and a slightly dog-eared folder detailing items and paintings in each room. Here, the folders are out of date, with normally displayed works moved to accommodate exhibition pieces, and the guides themselves seemed a little bemused by the changes. The result is frustrating: one is never quite sure what is part of the Rossettis show, and a great deal of time is spent leafing through the scant information available. The curators, perhaps in an effort to combat this, have produced large information boards full of biographical detail and contemporary quotes. The hall contains a family tree and gives each focus member a nickname (Christina, for instance, is The Famous One). They tell a great story but it is a lot to read and retain.
The Rossettis are collectively, of course, a compelling subject - here regularly and not inaccurately compared to the Brontes - but not an easy one to negotiate. Tate Britain tried it a few years ago, with only partial success: that exhibition kept teetering towards being the Dante Gabriel Show. Curators Hannah Squire and Helen Bratt-Wyton have given themselves a harder task by including not only all four siblings, but also Elizabeth Siddal and Lucy Madox Brown (Ford's daughter, who married William Michael Rossetti). Only three of the six are recognised as artists, although there is a small Veronese copy tentatively attributed to Christina on show, and indeed Maria Rossetti eschewed culture altogether in favour of a life of religious devotion. Added to this, the exhibition is restricted by its determination to only use in-house material, so there are few famous showstoppers. Paradoxically, this becomes its strength. Whereas Tate couldn't resist splashing big Rossetti canvases, here arguably the most impressive work on show is actually by the least heralded artist. Lucy Madox Brown's Romeo and Juliet, all gothic pallor and shadows, is a tantalising glimpse of the career she might have had, if marriage, motherhood and ill-health had not intervened.
In the main, this is a show of small things. Lady Mander was an enthusiastic collector of Siddal's work and one of the bedrooms is devoted to her tiny, angular, Medievalist drawings and two richly coloured gouaches which are reminiscent of Samuel Palmer in their claustrophobic intensity. Two pencil versions of an ecstatic St Cecilia also stand out. Rossetti's lithographic experiments are fascinating (and newly acquired) and the emphasis on his early drawings provides an interesting counterpoint to the more usual focus on his late 'stunners'. Works like The Bivouac After the Ball and the Shadowless Man have a fluid bulkiness which prefigures the curvilinear strength of his later figures and make his Pre-Raphaelite works seem like an increasingly uncharacteristic interlude. Much is also made of portraits, including Rossetti's tender pencil drawing of his mother and jokey cartoon of a tantrum-ing Christina. Indeed, one of the excuses for the whole exhibition is a newly acquired pastel portrait of a middle-aged Christina, painted soon after the death of her sister Maria and weighty with sadness. Wightwick also holds the famous Madox Brown portrait of William Michael Rossetti by Lamplight and a delightful representation of his daughter, Lucy, all jaunty ribbons and reluctant smile.
I would recommend a visit to Wightwick Manor under any circumstances but for the casual visitor I am not sure how much the exhibition will enhance the experience. The material and curatorial effort merit a better exhibition space, and the addition of a few loans - perhaps through a partner institution - could have raised this from a decent to a spectacular show. That said, this remains a must-see for anyone interested in the Rossettis and the domestic setting is ideal for small works which would get overwhelmed in a gallery space. There is an added bonus for Evelyn De Morgan fans: two of her works have been relocated to the Malthouse Gallery giving a first chance to see them in good lighting and all their glorious colour.
Sunday, February 15, 2026
A Kiss is Never Just a Kiss (for Valentine's Day)
Giotto, ‘Meeting of Joachim and Anne at the Golden Gate’, c.1303-6, Scrovegni Chapel, Padua, Italy (Wikimedia Commons)
You might think art galleries were good places to find romance. All that beauty, all those stories of love, all that naked flesh. But the longer you look and the more you know, the less lovely love seems.
Giotto is usually credited with painting the first kiss in Western art. It is a tender image of middle age devotion, as Anne and Joachim meet to share the happy news that they are finally to have a child. The trouble is, worshippers looking at this would have known what happens next. It’s the start of a tragedy: their son will be John the Baptist, destined to be beheaded at the whim of Salome. Suddenly a kiss of joy looks almost like one of consolation, and you start focusing on the ominous figure in black.
Eighteenth-century artists loved romantic intrigue and The Stolen Kiss was a favourite subject. A wealthy young woman has left her friends socialising in the other room, perhaps on the pretext of getting her shawl. Really she is meeting her lover. But will it end happily? The strong diagonal of messy fabric which draws your eye to her low-cut dress and the deep shadows behind suggest not. The mystery extends to the artist which may be Fragonard (famous for The Swing) or a female painter, Marguerite Gérard, whose work is often misattributed to him.
Wednesday, February 11, 2026
'Artist as Witness: The Impact of War' (Russell Cotes Art Gallery Bournemouth until March 8 2026)
The Russell Cotes Art Gallery in Bournemouth is a slightly incongruous place to hold an exhibition of war art, with it pot plants, Arts and Crafts decor and spectacular seascape views. Yet, the Morning Room is testimony to the reality that war can strike anywhere: the ceiling was repainted by Anna Zinkeisen after a blast wave from a German parachute mine caused its collapse in 1941. Their exhibition space is currently devoted to Artist as Witness: the Impact of War, too large a theme perhaps for such a small venue, but nonetheless an absorbing show which although focused on the two World Wars, is brought right up to date with contributions from George Butler in Ukraine.
There is a clear attempt to avoid the cliches of war art and to reflect the full range of those impacted. This is particularly seen in the contribution of women, some of whom, like Ethel Gabain, were employed as official War Artists, recording images of the Home Front. Themed sections include the rather unglamorous sounding 'Food Production' and 'War Preparations': Evelyn Dunbar has become a recognised name in recent years and while her unfussy depiction of the Women's Land Army Hostel has less visual impact than some of her works, it remains a fascinating slice of social history. In contrast Archibald Standish-Hartrick's lithograph invests his ploughing female figure with timelessness which seems to echo back to Medieval Books of Hours and James Bateman's Evacuees Help with the Hay Harvest is a rural idyll which belies the labour and the uprooted workforce involved.
The horror of war is never far away with Holocaust survivor Edith Birkin, and Robert McBryde's eerie ruins, but in many ways it is the banality which strikes home: Laura Knight's and George Biddle's sketched recordings of the Nuremberg Trials. These sit alongside more conventional reportage like Stephen Bone's Tank Landing Craft, with its dawn sky and oppressive silence which not only feels like the calm before the storm but engenders the stiff upper lip stoicism of British films. Similarly, Charles Burleigh's scene of Brighton Pavillion being used as a hospital is a straightforward representation, which derives its power from the incongruity of the grandiose setting and the ranks of white-sheeted beds.
There are plenty of big names: John Lavery's view of cavalry horses in Green Park 1914, and Lady Butler's watercolour of a kilted VC hero both seem like left-0vers from another more honourable age. Paul Nash manages to conjure poetry from the decimation of the First World War. Yet, as often the case with provincial exhibitions in which curators have raided both their own collections and the stacks of other museums, there are new names to discover. The faceless, ghostly figures of Amy Julia Drucker's 1916 Air Raid Shelter, crowded under artificial lights are reminiscent of Henry Moore's sketches of the same from the Second World War. Albert Richards' Anti Tank Ditch is like an bloody gash across the landscape; John Armstrong's The Red Cow takes a deliberately oblique view on the impact of war on the countryside.
This is an unfussy exhibition, with a good range of works and a functional display which allows all your attention to focus on the fifty or so pieces of art. There is variety aplenty, and Gill Clarke's clever juxtapositions of themes and examples means that one never feels overwhelmed by the subject. It is, however, impossible not to leave with a heavy heart: George Butler's works mean that this is the stuff of present reality not past history. Ultimately, all artists can do is to bear witness.
James McNeill Whistler (Tate Britain until September 27 2026)
James McNeill Whistler, The Artist in his Studio , c.1665-6 Chicago Institute of Art Whistler can be as difficult to pin down as the butterf...
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Georges Seurat, Le Chahut, 1889–1890 , Kröller-Müller Museum, Otterlo, Netherlands. The title of the National Gallery's new exhibit...
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John Singer Sargent, Simplon - Mrs Barnard and her Daughter Dorothy , 1905-15, Birmingham Museums Late nineteenth century Europe was awash...
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