Whitechapel Gallery opens major Eileen Agar survey
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Saturday, November 23, 2024


Whitechapel Gallery opens major Eileen Agar survey
Eileen Agar, Erotic Landscape, 1942, Collage on paper, 255 x 305mm. Private collection ©Estate of Eileen Agar/Bridgeman Images Photograph courtesy Pallant House Gallery, Chichester © Doug Atfield.



LONDON.- Whitechapel Gallery is presenting Eileen Agar: Angel of Anarchy, a major retrospective of the work of Eileen Agar (1899-1991). The exhibition is the largest of Agar’s work to date and coincides with a wider re-evaluation of women’s contribution to the story of modern art. It features over 100 paintings, collages, photographs, assemblages and archive material, much of which has been rarely exhibited.

Throughout her nearly 70-year career, Agar synthesised elements of two of the twentieth century’s most significant artistic tendencies: Cubism and Surrealism. The exhibition explores how these early inspirations rapidly developed into her very personal style that offered a moving commentary on society over a period of tremendous social change. Fascinated by classical art, ancient mythologies, the natural world and sexual pleasure, Agar mined these subjects and her own biography for the forms and content that filled her works.

Born in Buenos Aires, Argentina, to a Scottish industrialist father and an American biscuit firm heiress mother, Agar described her childhood as privileged and eccentric – ‘full of balloons, hoops and St. Bernard dogs’. Agar was a rebellious child, and her mother was frustrated by her growing interest in art, which she pursued in favour of needlework or ‘practising her comportment’. At the age of six, Agar was sent to boarding school in England where she undertook the rest of her education and made her base for the rest of her life.




The exhibition examines Agar’s entire oeuvre, from early works bearing the influence of her classical education at The Slade School of Fine Art, including Self Portrait (1927) and the previously unseen painting Joseph Sleeping (1929), an intimate portrait of her partner with whom she had moved to Paris in 1928. Having destroyed all of her previous work in 1925, these early works mark Agar’s rebirth as an independent artist. In Paris she learnt the principles of Cubism and was introduced to the anarchic tendencies of Surrealism. These influences are seen in early masterpieces, Autobiography of an Embryo (1933-4) and Quadriga (1935), her submission to the 1936 International Surrealist Exhibition held in London, where Agar was one of the few women to be included.

On her return to London in 1930, Agar started working with found objects including shells, bones, plant life, marine detritus, textiles and feathers to create sculptures that embodied her embrace of Surrealist wit and irreverence, as well as her continued fascination with the natural world, particularly the ocean. The exhibition features over 15 of these sculptural works including Angel of Anarchy (1936-40) and Angel of Mercy (1934), two of her poetic plaster cast ‘Angel’ heads, as well as her assemblage, Marine Object (1939). During this period, Agar also started working in collage and the exhibition features over 50 examples, such as Precious Stones (1936), Erotic Landscape (1942) and one her last collage works, Spider Woman (1983). Throughout the 1930s Agar also travelled frequently to France, and the exhibition includes her rarely seen Ploumanac’h Rock series of photographs taken while on holiday in Brittany in 1936 – works that became a lasting source of inspiration throughout her career.

Like many artists, Agar struggled with anxiety during the Second World War and spent much of her time working for the war effort. The encroaching conflict made her feel uneasy about artistic output as a worthwhile endeavour and she struggled to concentrate on painting. Post-war prosperity and hopefulness brought a renewal of inspiration and she began to focus on more joyful subjects and scenes of abundance, which are seen in works such as Dance of Peace (1945) and Cornucopia (1949). Her work began to blur the divisions between collage, drawing and painting and she renewed her interest in surrealist techniques including automatism, frottage and decalomania. The fluidity of automatic painting helped to free Agar from the anxieties that overwhelmed her during the war, and her experiments with spontaneous painting can be seen in Tree Torso 4 (c.1950), Head of Dylan Thomas (1960) and Pollen (1960), all of which are on display in the exhibition.

Agar exhibited less internationally after the war, however there was a huge resurgence of interest in her work in the 1970s. She worked prolifically until her death in 1991 and the final section of the exhibition focuses on the larger and more tightly composed works created during the later years of her career. Highlights of this period include a series of paintings she created in 1985, inspired by her Ploumanac’h Rock photographs taken almost 50 years before. These are exhibited together comprehensively for the first time. Celebrated as an artist and for her trailblazing experiments in surrealist fashion design, Agar modelled for Issey Miyake at the age of 87 and was made a Royal Academician in 1990. Angel of Anarchy celebrates Agar’s distinct and spirited style, spanning a career that endured almost a century.










Today's News

May 20, 2021

Exhibition of works by Julie Umerle explores the parameters of geometry, light, and space

Hindman Auctions to highlight sports legends in June 8 sale

Dutch slavery exhibition confronts brutal past

Six stolen frescoes returned to Pompeii

World's first robot artist exhibits at London's Design Museum

Christie's to offer works of fine and decorative art from across seven English country houses

Children of the Holocaust who are anonymous no more

Whitechapel Gallery opens major Eileen Agar survey

Visitors encouraged to touch artworks by Henry Moore in new exhibition curated by Edmund de Waal

France savours new freedoms as cafes, museums reopen

First solo exhibition in the UK of South African artist Igshaan Adams on view at the Hayward Gallery

Gasworks reopens with a solo exhibition by Amsterdam-based artist Mercedes Azpilicueta

Absurdist Paul McCarthy artwork added to Boijmans collection

Sale of museum paintings helps conclude strong auction season

Christie's American Art auctions total $17.1M │ Auction records set for Wolf Kahn and Emily Mason

Princess Margaret's longest serving Rolls-Royce to be auctioned by H&H Classics

Charles Grodin, star of 'Midnight Run' and 'Beethoven,' dies at 86

Sculpture, woodcuts and ceramics by Nicholas Pope on view at The New Art Centre

Rembrandt & Picasso lead sale of Old Master through Modern Prints at Swann

BOZAR opens an exhibition of works by Belgian architect and sculptor Jacques Moeschal

Chihuly Workshop and Abrams Books announce the launch of Chihuly and Architecture

Asheville Art Museum opens 'Public Domain: Photography and the Preservation of Public Lands'

Belfast Photo Festival returns from 3 - 30 June 2021

Modern art opens an exhibition of works by Sanya Kantarovsky

Progressive jackpots are a piece of art

BE OPEN Art: online galleries help artists survive the pandemic

Bennet Schwartz Shares 6 Marketing Trends In 2021 For Photographers

Baccarat The maximum famous card game of 2021 and played through a mobile phone each time, anywhere.

New GamStop Solution: Benefits for Players and Independent Operators

The evolution of art and graphics in Dutch online casinos




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Attorneys
Truck Accident Attorneys
Accident Attorneys
Holistic Dentist
Abogado de accidentes
สล็อต
สล็อตเว็บตรง

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site Parroquia Natividad del Señor
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful