The National Gallery, Londra, Regno Unito. 2 dicembre 2020. La Galleria Nazionale riapre il 2 dicembre con una mostra di Rosalind Nashashibi (nella foto), 2020 artista della Galleria Nazionale in Residence, con una nuova mostra - Rosalind Nashashibi: Un overflow di Passione e sentimento, che presenta quattro nuovi dipinti intervallati tra i dipinti spagnoli del XVII secolo della Galleria nella Sala 30. Immagine: Nashashibi ha tratto ispirazione dal dipinto di Diego Velazquez Filippo IV di Spagna in marrone e Argento che si affianca. Credit: Malcolm Park/Alamy Live News.
5201 x 3463 px | 44 x 29,3 cm | 17,3 x 11,5 inches | 300dpi
Data acquisizione:
2 dicembre 2020
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National Gallery press release: A new display by Rosalind Nashashibi, the first Artist in Residence of the National Gallery, was announced today. It will be on view from 3 December 2020 to 21 February 2021. With subjects ranging from Shakespeare to Ingrid Bergman, 2020 National Gallery Artist in Residence: Rosalind Nashashibi: An Overflow of Passion and Sentiment presents four new paintings of varying sizes interspersed among the Gallery’s 17th century Spanish paintings in Room 30. Nashashibi’s artistic intervention responds to the passion and emotional drama in works by Velázquez, Ribera, Murillo and Zurbarán that hang nearby. The display is part of a body of work that Nashashibi, a filmmaker and painter, has produced during her residency, engaging with the Gallery’s collection, research and teams throughout. Nashashibi is interested in how the 17th century paintings use figures and motifs to communicate their stories; her own works weave together elements from a range of diverse sources – film, literature, art history and personal biography. The new paintings she has made for the display depict Shakespeare’s character Malvolio from Twelfth Night, a sculpture of a dancer by Auguste Rodin and a film still of the actress Ingrid Bergman. Nashashibi has taken inspiration from Diego Velazquez’s painting Philip IV hunting Wild Boar (La Tela Real) and his portraits of King Philip IV that hang in the same room. Nashashibi’s paintings depict parts of the human figure, animals and objects set within non-specific locations. These fragments then act as outlines or framing devices for other subjects to explore how motifs take on new, ambiguous meanings when placed in different contexts. The four paintings are mounted within traditional frames made specially for the display, a collaboration between the artist and the Gallery’s Framing Department.
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