New Rhythms: Henri Gaudier-Brzeska, Kettle's Yard, Cambridge
Marking the centenary of Gaudier-Brzeska's death, aged 23, in the first world war, this show focuses on the sculptor's engagement with dance and movement, taking as starting point his major works "Red Stone Dancer" and "Dancer", and his bronze "Firebird", inspired by Ballets Russes performances. Drawing on Kettle's Yard's excellent Gaudier holdings, it also features work by Rodin and by British modernists David Bomberg, Wyndham Lewis and Jacob Epstein.
kettlesyard.co.uk, 01223 748100, Tuesday to June 21
. . .
Painting Paradise: The Art of the Garden, The Queen's Gallery, Buckingham Palace, London
Four centuries of horticultural art from the royal collections span illuminated manuscripts, sundials, headdresses, a Faberge crystal, and paintings ranging from Jan Brueghel the Elder's "Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden" to "Windsor Castle in Modern Times" by Edwin Landseer, Queen Victoria's favourite artist.
royalcollection.org.uk, 020 7766 7300, Friday to October 11
. . .
Nick Waplington/Alexander McQueen: Working Process, Tate Britain, London
Candid images of the fashion world by photographer Waplington, who had rare access to McQueen as the designer prepared "Horn of Plenty", his idiosyncratic final autumn/winter collection conceived as a retrospective reusing former fabrics and sets.
tate.org.uk, 020 7887 8888, to May 17
. . .
Callum Innes, Frith Street Gallery, London
Ακολουθήστε το Euro2day.gr στο Google News!Παρακολουθήστε τις εξελίξεις με την υπογραφη εγκυρότητας του Euro2day.gr
FOLLOW USΑκολουθήστε τη σελίδα του Euro2day.gr στο LinkedinNew works here belong to the Scottish artist's "Exposed Paintings" series, many in violet, created by adding and subtracting layers to achieve a field of black that is then partly removed by turpentine, revealing constituent colours stained with veils of luminous pigment. Alongside is Innes's "Resonance" series in deep black or pristine white: meditative, highly nuanced canvases by a virtuoso abstract painter.
frithstreetgallery.com, 020 7494 1550, to April 24
. . .
Magnificent Obsessions: The Artist as Collector, Barbican Art Gallery, London
Howard Hodgkin's Indian miniatures, Andy Warhol's cookie jars, Edmund de Waal's netsuke, Damien Hirst's taxidermy lion, Hiroshi Sugimoto's early edition of Newton and more: this rich exhibition sheds light on what artists' collections reveal about creative processes, cultural history, memory and desire.
barbican.org.uk, 020 7628 8891, to May 25
Adventures of the Black Square, Whitechapel Gallery, London
This centenary show celebrating Malevich's "Black Square" (1915) examines how geometric abstraction became a global language of social and political revolution, from Leger's "Ballet Mecanique" to Dan Flavin's fluorescent "Monument to V Tatlin" to contemporary performance. Chief glory is Russian work: Tatlin, Popova, Rodchenko. Final weeks.
whitechapelgallery.org, 020 7522 7888, to April 6
© The Financial Times Limited 2015. All rights reserved.
FT and Financial Times are trademarks of the Financial Times Ltd.
Not to be redistributed, copied or modified in any way.
Euro2day.gr is solely responsible for providing this translation and the Financial Times Limited does not accept any liability for the accuracy or quality of the translation