Flowers Gallery reopens after a long lockdown in London with a new exhibition of recent works by Bernard Cohen

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Tuesday, April 23, 2024


Flowers Gallery reopens after a long lockdown in London with a new exhibition of recent works by Bernard Cohen
Bernard Cohen, Clown, 2019, acrylic on canvas, 137 x 168 cm © Bernard Cohen, courtesy of Flowers Gallery.



LONDON.- Bernard Cohen is considered one of Britain’s most significant painters, whose paintings tell stories about identity and experience. Interiors is an exhibition of recent works demonstrating Cohen’s sustained enquiry into the complex chaos of everyday existence.

Since the 1950s, Cohen has developed a wide range of inventive techniques and processes of painting, creating labyrinthine compositions of line, shape, pattern and colour. His paintings will often tell many stories at once, using distinctive strategies of layering, superimposing, and condensing multiple images to establish intricate networks and relationships.




In a Spotlight exhibition at Tate Britain in 2017, Cohen's paintings were described as being, both individually and as a whole, "a series of diagrams about painting.” This approach developed during the 1960s, with works that incorporated many small independent paintings within the same canvas. (For example, Matter of Identity, 1963, in the Tate collection.) Cohen refers to the inner paintings as "small objects, that together establish the identity of the whole painting". In the recent works in this exhibition, recurring individual figurative motifs such as doors, windows, airplanes, paw marks and railway tracks, are interlaced to form an accumulative coherence and logic. The motifs are always rooted in personal experience, as Cohen explains: "There is nothing that appears in my paintings that hasn’t been seen by me or experienced by me. I paint things that I’ve seen, things that are part of the everyday, the ordinary. Among things that I see are random things: the way things overlap or interfere with each other. The random has become a very important part of my painting."

Cohen credits the beginning of his interest in interiors as a subject for his work with an encounter with Velasquez's 1656 painting Las Meninas and what he describes as "the extraordinary way in which [Velasquez] made everything in the space I was occupying part of the painting, so that half the painting is of things outside of the canvas." Cohen's paintings similarly operate around the complex space of the picture plane, navigating the unseen border that separates, in his own words "what is in the spectator’s world from what is in the painting".

The composition of the painting How to Paint the Milky Way is underpinned by a cosmos of dots, overlaid by a random configuration of airplane symbols and various cube-like planes and lattices that together make up a domestic scene of a doorway, pictures on the wall and a carpet on the floor. Cohen recalls: "During a long stay in New Mexico I experienced a daylight that was so bright that it voraciously consumed objects, while at night at 10,000 feet, away from any artificial light, the Milky Way appeared as one overwhelming physical object. I was overwhelmed by the density of what I saw. What is a painting and what fills it? Where is its all-containing identity? I continue to ask myself these questions.”

Born in London in 1933, Bernard Cohen studied at the Slade School of Fine Art from 1951-1954. In 1988 he was appointed as Slade Professor and Director of the Slade School of Fine Art, University College, London. Cohen came to prominence during the 1960s and has since exhibited widely. His first solo exhibition with Flowers Gallery was in 1998. In 2007 the gallery hosted Bernard Cohen: Paintings from the Sixties, focusing on an important period in Cohen’s artistic development, followed by Work of Six Decades in 2009, which celebrated his career by bringing together a selection of key works and the publication of a comprehensive book. A subsequent survey exhibition titled About Now: Paintings and Prints 2000-2015 took place at Flowers Gallery in 2015, accompanied by the book About Now by Ian McKay. Other important exhibitions include Artist in Focus, Six Paintings from the Tate Gallery Collection, The Tate Gallery, London in 1995; Stroll on! Aspects of British Abstract Art in the Sixties, Mamco, Musée d’Art Moderne et Contemporain, Geneva in 2006; Abstraction and the Human Figure at CAM’s British Art Collection, Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, Lisbon in 2010; and a solo retrospective Spotlight Display at Tate Britain in 2017-18. Bernard Cohen lives and works in London. Ten of Cohen’s paintings are in the Tate collection, and his work is included in numerous public collections worldwide.










Today's News

April 22, 2021

New Tobin Collection of Theatre Arts exhibition opens at the McNay Art Museum

Documentary tells 'unknown' story of Titanic's Chinese survivors

Two ultra-rare bangles steal the show at Sotheby's Hong Kong

Covid-hit UK museum reopens early... as a supermarket

Xavier Hufkens opens an exhibition of new work by Daniel Buren

Häusler Contemporary opens an exhibition of works by Richard Allen Morris

Philip Mould & Company exhibits a group of exceptional Elizabethan and Jacobean portraits

New digital art space revealed in the Santa Fe Railyard

How a multimedia whiz seized digital theater's big moment

Mao Ayuth, filmmaker who survived the Khmer Rouge, dies at 76

Flowers Gallery reopens after a long lockdown in London with a new exhibition of recent works by Bernard Cohen

Rembrandt, Monet, Picasso & more in Old Master Through Modern Prints at Swann Galleries

Half a century later, John Lennon's 'Plastic Ono Band' still hits hard

From Op Art to NFTs, Heritage Auction's Modern & Contemporary event travels back to the future

Pair of Chippendale mahogany side chairs bring $33,210 at Neue Auctions

Marianne Boesky Gallery now representing Celeste Rapone

Denmark's cafes, restaurants and museums reopen

Museum of Contemporary Art, North Miami opens retrospective of artist Michael Richard

The Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza opens the first retrospective in Spain of Georgia O'Keeffe's work

France ready to ease curfew, travel limits on May 2

Detroit Institute of Arts adds first surrealist painting by a woman artist

Art Bridges announces appointment of new Director of Art Bridges Fellows Program

MAD Architects unveils Cloudscape of Haikou

Selection of five classic Bentleys with VIP connections for sale by H&H Classics

Why choose to waterproof for your house or building?

What does a private detective do?

Clip art: Top 10 websites for free download

6 Essential Tips You Must Follow For Filing Online Divorce In Michigan

Everything about CBD for hair growth

7 Most Popular Online Gambling Games in Portugal

Baby Gates, A Great Way to Secure Your Art, Home & Pet




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

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
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