Showing posts with label Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art. Show all posts

Tuesday, 8 October 2019

Cut and Paste exhibition at Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art , Edinburgh

This was the first ever survey exhibition of collage. It gave a comprehensive review of collage in all its forms, including cut, glued, stitched and stapled paper, photography, stickers, scrapbooks, botanical specimens, patchwork, Cubist and Surrealist artworks, films and more. The exhibition started with books published in the 1500s with flaps stuck into them and ended with digital photographs made a few months ago.






Kurt Schwitters
Mz 229:Hot Water, 1921


Hannah Hoch
Untitled, 1924


Hannah Hoch
Astronomie, 1922


Jacques Villegle
The Jazz Men, 1961




















Peter Blake
Museum of the Colour White 2, 2001

I left the exhibition with a real desire to do some cutting and sticking! It seems that technological developments have had a major impact on the history of collage and the direction that it is going. It seems there has been a move away from the more traditional means of collage (cut and stick) in the artists using collage in the present day, instead preferring to use photoshop or digital means of creating layers. I believe there is still a need for the more physical and tactile collage, and so I have been encouraged to carry on with the collages that I am creating. 

Thursday, 1 January 2015

Generation at the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art

The Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art is showing an extensive range of work by artists connected with Scotland in the current exhibition, GENERATION.

The exhibition features some room-sized installations such as 



Real Life Rocky Mountain, 1996 by Ross Sinclair,


and new commissions by Claire Barclay, Toby Paterson, Ciara Philips and Alex Dordoy, all of which were made in response to the architecture of the gallery in which they were exhibiting.



  
Victoria Morton


The exhibition was a great example of the variety of media and approaches to art making that contemporary artists use, from drawing and painting by artists such as Victoria Morton and Alison Watt, through site specific installations, to video and films by artists such as Smith/Stewart and Henry Coombes.







Alison Watt