LONDON.- Sir John Soanes Museum presents Face to Face: British Portrait Prints from the Clifford Chance art collection (10 October 2014 24 January 2015), an exploration of the development of portraiture by British printmakers from the mid-20th and the first decade of the 21st century.
Featuring works by Patrick Caulfield, David Hockney, William Hogarth, Peter Howson and Gary Hume, among others, Face to Face offers a rare opportunity to see engravings, etchings, screenprints and lithographs from the award-winning Clifford Chance art collection. Some 40 prints from a collection rarely seen by the public are displayed in the Soane Gallery at Sir John Soanes Museum, exploring the themes of realism, abstraction, process, caricature and social commentary through the medium of portraiture and self-portraiture.
The exhibition includes works such as David Hockneys 1976 Henry at Table; Leon Kossoffs Going Home; Paula Regos homage to Jane Eyre in her lithographs of Mr Rochester; an early Patrick Caulfield screenprint Portrait of a Frenchman, 1971; Tim Noble and Sue Websters Double Double Vision Vision (a lithographic portrait drawn whilst the artists were blindfolded); Turner Prize 2013 nominee Lynette Yiadom Boakyes first etching Siskin; and Gary Humes The Cleric, from 2000.
The exhibition is also an opportunity to see the work of younger print makers such as Nicola Thomas and her etchings that play on the themes of visibility and Hollywood film stars of the 1930s and 1940s, and the starkly objective and minimal lithographs of Simon by Alessandro Raho.
William Hogarths Character and Caricaturas, from 1743, is also featured in the exhibition and will be on show during the 250th anniversary of Hogarths death on 26th October, alongside other Hogarth works in the Soane collection including masterpieces such as A Rakes Progress and the An Election series.
The famous home of Sir John Soane at No. 13 Lincolns Inn Fields in London has portraiture displayed throughout. Portraits of Napoleon, William Pitt the Younger, Sir William Chambers and portraits of Soane and his family form an important aspect of the collection of the Museum. Face to Face extends this investigation into portraiture past Soanes compilation of work and into the 21st century.
Dr Jerzy J. Kierkuć-Bieliński, Exhibitions Curator at Sir John Soanes Museum comments Portraiture formed an important area of patronage, collecting and creative enquiry for Sir John Soane (he even described his country villa, Pitzhanger Manor, Ealing, as a type of portrait through architecture).
One contemporary writer put it (Soane)
patronised his contemporary artists of the modern British school
including such great portraitists as Sir Thomas Lawrence. His 1828 portrait of Soane, one of Lawrences last paintings, is one of the great paintings in our collection. Soane extended his passion for collecting to include prints. We have one of the most significant, historic collections of etchings by the Italian printmaker G B Piranesi. Soane also had passion for the work of that great British printmaker William Hogarth. One of the treasures of our library is a presentation volume containing seventy-four first impressions of Hogarths work (which will be on display during the exhibition).
Sonia Gilbert, Clifford Chance partner and member of the firm's art committee, says 'Bringing art into our building exposes our people to the best and most original thoughts of artists across the decades. We are honoured to be invited to show highlights of our collection at the Museum and to present an opportunity for others to see what delights and inspires us at work. As Sir John Soane's collection laid the framework for future national art galleries, we hope that our collection might serve as an example of what can be achieved by corporate support for the arts.'