I am posting a very good, long obituary by Christopher Knight which has just been published in the Los Angeles Times.
https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-arts/story/2024-07-13/bill-viola-dead-video-artist
I am posting a very good, long obituary by Christopher Knight which has just been published in the Los Angeles Times.
https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-arts/story/2024-07-13/bill-viola-dead-video-artist
I am extremely sorry to read of the death of Bill Viola (https://mailchi.mp/southernandpartners/remembering-bill-viola-1951-2024?e=67a409c7c3).
I have never forgotten the impact of first seeing his work in Durham Cathedral. We were driving south and stopped in Durham, where The Messenger was displayed in the nave.
In autumn 2003, he did an exhibition at the National Gallery called The Passions, which had first been shown by John Walsh at the Getty. It was the first time that there had been a monographic exhibition by a living artist and worked very well in the basement galleries of the Sainsbury Wing – a small number of works filling the space in a way which was profound.
More recently, on 9 February 2017, I visited him and his wife, Kira Perov, at their studio in Los Angeles. As we left, I took a photograph of him. I don’t normally do this, but I think I knew that it was probably the last time I would see him.
I am re-posting it in his memory:-

We went last night to Katya Kabanova at Grange Park Opera, a brilliant production directed by David Alden. It didn’t seem quite as far as I thought and the theatre – the theatre in the woods – now feels so much more established in its setting in the woods behind West Horsley Place. It’s a credit to Wasfi Kani and to the remarkable craft skills of its builder Martin Smith of R.J. Smith & Co, who built it at such speed in 2017, a version of La Scala in Surrey:-



We went to an intriguing intervention by Langlands & Bell on the ground floor of an architectural practice called Apt at the northern, Finsbury end of St. John Street. I thought how nice it was to see works of art in what was essentially a work environment, but in the talk, it was pointed out how many museums are in unconventional environments, including several that Langlands & Bell have worked in – the Soane, Charleston.
One of their first works, preserved as the seat of a chair in the exhibition, was a model of the basement of the National Gallery for the Property Services Agency which maybe gave them a taste for the more surreal histories of museums (or muse ums).
I have been asked to supply an installation shot of the Treehandles. I did so, but have been puzzling over the optical illusion which it took me a while to work out:-

It has also made me realise, which I already knew, how beautiful the placement of every object was:-

It feels a bit perverse not to mention that there was an election yesterday. Of course, it already feels as if it was a foregone conclusion – perhaps it was – but there were a few unpredictable aspects of it: the scale of the victory; and what would happen to the other parties, including Reform.
It always felt a touch unpremeditated, as if Sunak had decided on the date without wider consultation only so that his co-workers in 10, Downing Street could go on a flutter in the local betting shop once the date had been decided: a perfect image of the venality and politics of self-interest of recent years.
It will be interesting to see what steps Starmer and Sue Gray take to curb this lack of standards in public life, which they should.
It’s a very beautiful exhibition open tomorrow and Saturday 12 to 6. Unit 3, 1-7, Ernest Avenue, SE27 0DQ. Train or bus to West Norwood. It’s next door to the bus depot.
Hard to locate even with Google. Look out for the sign which says LONDON SIGNS and then press a square white button on door number 3, which doesn’t look like a door bell but is.
Then, there is a magical white exhibition space:-




It’s set-up day for Romilly’s exhibition in Edmund de Waal’s beautiful workshop/studio in Studio 3, 1-7, Ernest Avenue, West Norwood, SE27 0DQ (it’s an easy walk up the hill from West Norwood station on a line straight from Victoria).

The light in the studio is very beautiful, particularly in the space which is double-height and top-lit, like a sanctuary:-

Open from 12-6 on Friday and Saturday.
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