All Too Human explores how artists in Britain have stretched the possibilities of paint in order to capture life around them. The exhibition spans a century of art making, from the early twentieth century through to contemporary developments. London forms the backdrop, where most of the artists lived, studied and exhibited.
- This is the Guide to the Exhibition - room by room
- you can also download the large print guide which lists all the paintings and artwork
I'm not going to comment on the art as everybody has their own perspective and the reviewers from the newspapers have given it a thorough going over (see links to their reviews at the end).
Instead I'm going to comment on something that struck me this morning when reviewing the names of who was in the exhibition - and who was not.
Key points:
- it's an exhibition of c. 100 paintings by SOME of those considered by SOME to be leading modern British painters (i.e. made their names in the 20th century)
- it includes a significant number of works by Lucian Freud and Francis Bacon
- it's about painters in Britain who represent
- human figures,
- their relationships and
- their surroundings
- it has very few women painters. Notably Paula Rego gets a room to herself and there is a large painting by Jenny Saville - but other female painters are less notable than the chaps.
- there's an effort at diversity (as in 'tackle the checklist') - in terms of ethnicity - but it's not very persuasive.
Diversity
It's very definitely an exhibition of paintings by people with very diverse backgrounds - although very little is made of this.
It hadn't really occurred to me before this exhibition just how diverse "British painters" in the 20th century were.
Map of locations: Blue = artist studios; Red = Art Schools; Green - galleries |
List of locations of Artists Studios and who is linked to which London Art School |
The art (mostly paintings) are by artists who had some sort of association with London - with some being members of the so-called "School of London" - and very many underline the diversity of nationalities in the capital - and in the field of painting in the 20th century.
So they include......
Immigrants
Born in:- Germany -
- Walter Sickert (1860-1942) - born in Munich; moved to Britain in 1868 following the German annexation of Schleswig-Holstein
- Lucian Freud (1922-2011) - born in Berlin Germany; moved to UK in 1933
- Frank Auerbach (1931 - to date) - born in Berlin; naturalised British citizen since 1947; studied at Saint Martin’s School of Art and the Royal College of Art
- Ireland - Francis Bacon (1909-1992) - born in Dublin; moved to UK in the 1920s
- India - FN Souza (1924-2002) - born in Goa; moved to London in 1949
- Portugal - Paula Rego (1935 - to date) - born in Lisbon; sent to school and later college in London in 1950s; moved to UK in late 80s
- USA - R.B. Kitaj (1932-2007) - son and step-son of immigrants/refugees; moved to UK in late 1950s and settled here
First generation sons and daughters of immigrants
So we have
- Ghana - Lynette Yiadom-Boakye (- to date) - daughter of Ghanaian parents, born in London
- Poland - David Bomberg (1890-1957) - son of a Polish immigrant, born in Birmingham
- Russia - Leon Kossoff (1926 - to date) - son of Russian parents, born in Islington; studied at Saint Martin’s School of Art and the Royal College of Art
Plus those born in the UK
Mostly outside London!
- Stanley Spencer (1891-1959) born in Cookham Berkshire, studied at the Slade
- William Coldstream (1908-1987) born in Northumberland, closely associated with the Slade
- Dorothy Mead (1928–1975) - born in London, studied at Borough Poly. minor British Painter
- Michael Andrews (1928-1995) - born in Norwich, studied at The Slade
- Dennis Creffield (1931-2018) - born in London, studied at the Borough Polytechnic and Slade; first winner of John Moores Painting Prize
- Euan Uglow (1932-2000) - born in London; studied at Camberwell and the Slade
- Celia Paul (1959 to date) - British but born in India
- Cecily Brown (1969 - to date)- born in London. Lives and works in New York
- Jenny Saville (1970 to date) - born in Cambridge, lives and works in Oxford, studied at Glasgow School of Art
and finally.... artists who are very definitely NOT British
I have absolutely no idea why they are included in the exhibition if it is supposed to be about Modern British art and artists! (Other than access to the artwork?)
- Russia - Chaïm Soutine (1893–1943) - born in Russia; emigrated to Paris in 1913
- Switzerland - Alberto Giacometti (1901-1966) - born in Borgonovo, Switzerland; lived and worked mainly in Paris
The questions I was left with
I was left wondering about:
- The notable artists INCLUDED who do NOT paint from life - even if they paint flesh
- The notable artists EXCLUDED who do (or did) paint from life or their lives and contexts
- Is it just about some outdated and skewed view of 'The School of London'.
- Is immigration a major feature in the biographies of great British Artists? Frequently? Sometimes? Only in this exhibition?
- What is "British Art" and a "British Artist" - two questions which had never occurred to me before...
In other words what was the idea or question it was addressing - and did it meet its brief or pitch for space for an exhibition?
Anybody got any ideas?
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Reviews
If you're still umming and erring whether to stir your stumps in the next couple of days - here's the reviews
- RECOMMENDED All Too Human : Bacon, Freud and a Century of Painting Life — unmissable but infuriating | Financial Times - also highlights some of the confusion within the exhibition and touches on the absences and the inclusions of artists in this exhibition
- RECOMMENDED All Too Human: Bacon, Freud and a Century of Painting Life review - The School of London gets a modern makeover | Evening Standard - it's the review which comes closest to my take on the show!
- All Too Human – Bacon, Freud and a Century of Painting Life (4 stars) | The Independent - It all seems a bit too dutiful and sombre - also comments on absent artists and unclear focus
These stuck to comments on the paintings without too much thought about the purpose of the exhibition
- All Too Human review – brutal, tender and bizarre, this is life, not art (5 stars) | Jonathan Jones in The Guardian
- All Too Human review – flesh in the game of British painting (5 stars) | The Observer
- All too Human at Tate Britain: an exploration of our most personal concerns, via a century of painting | The Telegraph
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