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I am so excited to say that my guest on the GWA Podcast is the acclaimed painter, Rose Wylie! Born in 1934, as the youngest of seven children to Victorian parents, Wylie spent her early childhood in India before coming to England aged 5. This was in 1939, in the midst of a bomb-filled Second World War and increasingly fractured world. She went on to study figurative painting, at Folkestone and Dover College of Art in Kent from 1952–56, at a time when tutors would say to her ‘It's no good bothering with you, you're a girl, you'll get married, have children and that'll be that.' … It was then to a teacher training programme at Goldsmiths before putting art aside to raise three children. This was, until 1979 when Wylie returned to the studio enrolling at the Royal College of Art, in her early 40s. Her first solo exhibition came a few years later in 1985, but despite Wylie working in her cottage-slash-studio in Kent for the last 50+ years – where we are very excitingly recording today – it was not until the last 10–15 years that her work has been given the attention and acclaim it has always deserved. Playful and fractured, featuring text overlaid with image, witnessing a Rose Wylie painting in person is to see the world in a different way. Wylie takes recognisable elements from pop culture, history, mythology, sport, even the Bible – from flowers, battenberg cakes, sportstars, queens, to the likes of Nicole Kidman and Emily Maitlis – and shows us them anew, in her paintings that are void of perspective to the point that there is no indication of where the work starts or ends. Her paintings are sometimes full of movement – like a football being kicked, almost balletically, with players, clad in yellow, darting across the dotty canvas that surrounds its viewer. At other times they remind me of a film playing out – like the blood-clad figure lying on the floor in Kill Bill – or even a script with stage directions featuring phrases like “getting dark” or “yellow” … Wylie's paintings are full of decisions, ideas, and the more I look at them, the more her world opens up… Now 90 years old, after a celebrity-filled birthday bash, Wylie is back better than ever for her exhibition at David Zwirner London “When Found becomes Given”, opening on April 3rd, and I couldn't be more delighted to be speaking to her at her Kent-based studio today. Exhibition: https://www.davidzwirner.com/exhibitions/2025/rose-wylie-when-found-becomes-given -- THIS EPISODE IS GENEROUSLY SUPPORTED BY THE LEVETT COLLECTION: https://www.famm.com/en/ https://www.instagram.com/famm_mougins // https://www.merrellpublishers.com/9781858947037 Follow us: Katy Hessel: @thegreatwomenartists / @katy.hessel Sound editing by Nada Smiljanic Music by Ben Wetherfield
Painting... but knitted!? We chat all things painting with winner of the John Moores Painting Prize Lady Grantchester Award 2023, Emma Roche. We chatted about stereotypes, trying to fit into other people's expectations of your career path, alternative education, worklife balance, being an artist and a parent - this episode is absolutely stacked with goodness!! So, search BANG ON in your streaming app to listen, like, follow, and subscribe. Don't forget to leave us a review! It really helps the show (and gives us a fuzzy feeling, too) About the show: BANG ON is a knowledge sharing podcast, breaking down some of the steps we've picked up along the way as an organisation and as artists in building a successful arts career. It's for emerging artists, packaging tips and tricks on some of the topics we've often been asked about over the years. In Season 1 we took you through all the steps of putting an exhibition together. In Season 2, we take you through the broader arts cultural landscape, plotting the uncharted waters of opportunities, education, artist-led activity, identity, rejection, mental health and MORE! Yep, you might say this podcast is BANG ON - let's get stuck in!!! About the hosts: Short Supply is an artist-led organisation established in 2019 by Mollie Balshaw and Rebekah Beasley, with a goal to support emerging artists. Follow us on all social media @shortsupplymcr For all requests email shortsupplymcr@outlook.com Check our website at www.shortsupply.org About Emma Roche: https://www.rocheemma.ie/ About John Moores Painting Prize: The John Moores Painting Prize is a biennial award to the best contemporary painting, submission is open to the public. The prize is named for Sir John Moores, noted philanthropist, who established the award in 1957. It is the most prestigious painting prize in the UK, and one of the longest running calls for art in the world. Past prize winners include David Hockney (1967), Mary Martin (1969), Lisa Milroy (1989), Peter Doig (1993), Keith Coventry (2010), Rose Wylie (2014), Michael Simpson (2016), Jacqui Hallum (2018) and most recently Kathryn Maple (2020).
Episode 132 January 19, 2024 On the Needles 0:52 ALL KNITTING LINKS GO TO RAVELRY UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED. Please visit our Instagram page @craftcookreadrepeat for non-Rav photos and info With Sally who works at Imagiknit! Joni cotton t-shirt by Natasja Hornby Gardsra “Garden Fairy” cardigan in Malabrigo & Knitting for Olive mohair Churchmouse Saddle Shoulder sweater in Saxony cashmere by juniper moon Rad Plaid Cowl by Andrea Mowry Espresso scarf September slipover by Petite Knit in Lang Mohair On the Easel 19:21 With Sonia Brittain–IG link Sonia Brittain on YouTube Sonia Brittain on Patreon Sketchbooks, daily art, abstracts, portraits, landscapes. Justin Mortimer “There's a niche for everybody in art.” Rose Wylie, just one of many good articles about her. Craves variety in her art process. Joy of Drawing–Floral class with Sonia On the Table 40:39 With Nathan, short & sweet. Experimenting with potatoes, more bison. Meatballs–audio message. Kodiak power cakes On the Nightstand 44:35 We are now a Bookshop.org affiliate! You can visit our shop to find books we've talked about or click on the links below. The books are supplied by local independent bookstores and a percentage goes to us at no cost to you! With Meghan Butler SFPL Green Apple Books, Blackbird Books The First Cat in Space and the Soup of Doom Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver Ezra Klein interview with B. Kingsolver Vaster Wilds by Lauren Groff The world we make by NK Jemisin Aesthetica by Allie Rowbottom Ripe by Sarah Rose Etter Roxane Gay newsletter The Overstory by Richard Powers Erin Girls They Write Songs About by Carlene Bauer You are Here by Karin Lin-Greenberg
Descubre a esta artista de 90 años rescatada del siglo pasado y que pinta igual que los artistas más contemporáneos. La pintora británica es uno de los mejores ejemplos biográficos para entender cómo se comporta el mundo del arte actual. Además de su figura, repasaremos el nuevo auge del arte naif, las políticas identitarias y los feminismos en el arte junto con una comparación entre artistas emergentes como Robert Nava y la forma de entender el arte de una señora de 90 años como Rose Wylie. Si quieres ver este pódcast con imágenes de los artistas, puedes visitar mi canal de Youtube: Malasombra.
Hoe komt de skyline van een stad tot stand en waarom zoeken we het altijd hoger? Daarover gaat een tentoonstelling in het STAM in Gent. Wat verderop presenteert het SMAK de speelse schilderijen van de 88-jarige Britse kunstenares Rose Wylie. Het studiecentrum Vandenhove haalt het werk van Franz Cumont vanonder het stof. In de vroege 20ste eeuw reisde hij naar het Midden-Oosten, op zoek naar sporen van de antieke wereld. Hij kwam terug met een reeks foto's die onze blik op het oosten bepaalden.
Robert & Russell meet leading curator Ralph Rugoff OBE, the director of London's Hayward Gallery since 2006, and the curator of the 58th Venice Biennale in 2019, titled May You Live in Interesting Times.We explore the Hayward's stunning new exhibition Mixing It Up: Painting Today that brings together 31 contemporary painters who exploit the unique characteristics of their medium to create fresh, compelling works of art that speak to this moment. Approaching painting as a platform for speculative thinking and unexpected conversations, the artists in this exhibition make works that oscillate between observation and invention, depiction and allegory, illusion and materiality.Instead of trying to craft iconic images, they treat the canvas as a site of assemblage where references converge from diverse territories including music, design, advertising, vernacular and documentary photography, viral memes, fashion and cinema, as well as art history. Resonantly ambiguous, their paintings invite viewers to recruit their own imaginations in working out different ways to interpret them, while often questioning how their social reception might shift among different audiences.This extraordinary exhibition includes new and recent works by 31 artists including previous Talk Art guests Alvaro Barrington, Caroline Coon, Somaya Critchlow, Jadé Fadojutimi, Denzil Forrester, Lubaina Himid, Sophie von Hellermann and Rose Wylie.Rugoff was born in New York City and studied semiotics at Brown University. Prior to the Hayward, he was director of the Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts in San Francisco for nearly six years. Follow @RalphRugoff and @Hayward.Gallery on Instagram. Mixing It Up is now open and runs until 12th December 2021. To buy tickets or Hayward Gallery membership, visit their official website: https://www.southbankcentre.co.uk/whats-on/art-exhibitions/mixing-it-painting-todayFor images of all artworks discussed in this episode visit @TalkArt. Talk Art theme music by Jack Northover @JackNorthoverMusic courtesy of HowlTown.com We've just joined Twitter too @TalkArt. If you've enjoyed this episode PLEASE leave us your feedback and maybe 5 stars if we're worthy in the Apple Podcast store. For all requests, please email talkart@independenttalent.com See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Rose Wylie was born in 1934 in Kent, where she currently lives and works. She is considered one of the ...
TURNING THE TABLES ON TALK ART with GRAHAM NORTON!!!!To celebrate the launch of the debut Talk Art book, Russell & Robert meet legendary broadcaster and best-selling author Graham Norton to discuss writing Talk Art. That's right, it's TALK ART BOOK release day!!! We are PUBLISHED AUTHORS!!!A huge THANK YOU to all the talented artists whose artworks are featured in the book and to our superstar editor Ella Parsons and the team @octopus_books_ & @ilex_creative & @chroniclebooks for helping us every step of the way. Thanks to Jerry Saltz for the beautiful foreword!!!!Follow Graham Norton @GrahNort on Instagram. Visit Waterstone's or The Margate Bookshop to buy our brand new TALK ART BOOK, out 13th May 2021 in UK & Europe, 18th May in USA & Canada.Talk Art is a wonderfully witty and accessible roadmap to contemporary art from the hosts of the hugely popular eponymous podcast. When launching the Talk Art podcast in 2018, actor Russell Tovey and gallerist Robert Diament had one clear aim: to make the art world more accessible. Since then, the podcast has grown to be a global hit, featuring exclusive interviews with leading artists, curators, gallerists, actors, musicians and fellow art lovers such as Tracey Emin, Lena Dunham, Sir Paul Smith, David Shrigley, Noel Fielding, Edward Enninful, Rose Wylie, Toyin Ojih Odutola and Sir Elton John.Talk Art, the book, is a beautiful and accessible celebration of contemporary art, and a guidebook to navigating and engaging with the art world. Covering a range of different media from photography and ceramics to performance and sound art, the book explores the way art interacts with our society, highlights lesser-known artists, and provides a snapshot of the art world as it is today. With a wealth of imagery - some never before seen in print and some created exclusively for the book - and an informative, engaging narrative, Talk Art will become the must-have book art lovers return to again and again.For images of all artworks discussed in this episode visit @TalkArt. Talk Art theme music by Jack Northover @JackNorthoverMusic courtesy of HowlTown.com We've just joined Twitter too @TalkArt. If you've enjoyed this episode PLEASE leave us your feedback and maybe 5 stars if we're worthy in the Apple Podcast store. For all requests, please email talkart@independenttalent.com See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Thanks for listening to this weeks podcast we were lucky to be able to visit the amazing artist Catherine Cassidy in Cronulla who told us about her no fear attitude to painting from her early days of painting in oils to her current practise of using anything that works. Catherine Cassidy's work can be found on her website https://catherinecassidy.studioor on her instagram https://www.instagram.com/catherinecassidyartist/?hl=enJulie and I spoke of our online classes we have just finished at https://nas.edu.auCatherine spoke of her art education she attended Tafe and National Art school to do a masters. Catherines goal in her artwork is to discover in the landscape, by a certain way of handling paint she retrieves that collective memory of the landscape - she has to keep reminding herself regularly of this need to be immersed in the natural environment. Catherine's attitude was so refreshing to talk too and very honest about her work. She went to art school to prove to herself that she did not need to go. She feels that she works better by being isolated - she wants to be stimulated by the natural world not other artists work. Catherine prefers to work on polyester or board and loves to use acrylic and oil sticks made by Sennelier.We spoke of Quentin Blake on isolation art school using a homemade mix of oil sticks watch the you tube video herehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z1HHY1DQIvo Rose Wylie's work is a favourite of Catherine's check her out -https://www.royalacademy.org.uk/art-artists/name/rose-wylie-raCatherine quotes the artist George Baselitz on her website ‘The artist must deny everything, that's their job.' https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artists/georg-baselitz-699 check him out Julie and I went into the National park with the fantastic Tim from Girri Girra Aboriginal Experiences - you can find him on https://www.google.com/search?client=safari&rls=en&q=girri+girra&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8Catherines favourite art tool is her finger or a long haired hog haired filbert.Catherine would choose to visit Rose Wylie's studio or Sid Nolan.CONTACTSSubmit any questions by emailing http://fiona@fionaverity.com.au DM us on our instagramFollow us on Instagram: http://instagram.com/fionaverity http://instagram.com/julienicholsonartisthttp://instagram.com/art.wankPodcast artwork by Ingrid Kwong contact her http://littlescapes.com.au
Season 6 continues! Recorded remotely on 3rd April 2020 during lockdown, Russell & Robert chat to leading artist Katherine Bradford, best known for her radiant paintings of swimmers, superheroes, ships and dreamy landscapes that critics describe as simultaneously representational and abstract, luminous, and richly metaphorical.We explore how Katherine changed her life aged 30 years old to become an artist moving with her twin children from Maine to New York City, making friends with Chris Martin and other passionate intense painters in 1980s Brooklyn: "It was quite a new idea. People were not going to Brooklyn to be artists. So we were in a sense pioneers and we all stuck together, we relied on each other.” We discuss landscape painting, lobsters and Brunswick Maine's cold water coast, the sense of night in her works and how she came to add figurative elements which in turn increased her audience and interest in her paintings. We learn of her admiration for Marsden Hartley’s clouds "logos of the sky", John Marin and Alex Katz who share a direct, simplified language of painting. We explore the influence of folk art and children’s art, the spiritual in art (à la Kandinsky), and how working with the influential CANADA gallery helped her to progress. We find out what success means to her and the themes within her new solo show Adams and Ollman gallery in Portland. We discuss the joy of Instagram and her love of other painter's works including Susan Rothenberg, Rothko, Rose Wylie, Chris Martin, Katherine Bernhardt and Nicole Eisenman.Follow @KatheBradford on Instagram and please also visit Katherine's galleries @CanadaGallery and @AdamsandOllman and visit their website to view Katherine's current solo exhibition 'Mother Joins The Circus' www.adamsandollman.com. For images of all artworks discussed in this episode visit @TalkArt. We've just joined Twitter too @TalkArt. If you've enjoyed this episode PLEASE leave us your feedback and maybe 5 stars if we're worthy in the Apple Podcast store. Thank you for listening to Talk Art, we will be back very soon. For all requests, please email talkart@independenttalent.com See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
罗斯·怀利从时代的角度看艺术,这里是磨时艺见。 人们通常会觉得,追求艺术梦想只属于年轻人,因为中年人要忙于养家糊口,老年人则是含饴弄孙、颐养天年。但是来自英国的画家罗斯·怀利(Rose Wylie)却打破了这样的传统观念,她在45岁重拾绘画技艺,在80岁的时候成为英国绘画界最具声望的“约翰摩尔斯奖”的获得者。 罗斯和查尔斯王子在皇家艺术学院罗斯·怀利在17岁的时候就进入福克斯通多佛学院(Folkestone and Dover School)学习艺术,并在那里遇到她的丈夫罗伊·奥克拉德(Roy Oxlade),两人在毕业之后随即结婚。婚后,罗伊继续自己的艺术创作,罗斯则成为家庭主妇。对于这样的选择,罗伊表示自己并不后悔,因为这让自己获得更多的经验和思考,然后再开始创作的时候,一切就变得更顺利了。 罗斯在45岁的时候来到英国皇家艺术学院深造,用数十年的时间投入绘画创作,并逐渐被世人所关注。2010年的时候,她被英国《卫报》称为“英国最红的新画家”,这个时候的她已经76岁。 罗斯·怀利的作品:《Pink Table Cloth 》罗斯·怀利的作品:《Sitting on a Bench with Border》尽管罗斯已经年事已高,但是创作的时候却像年轻人一样,喜欢熬夜创作、喜欢把颜料和报纸都堆起来。她在创作期间,无意间瞥见的内容都会成为作品的一部分,所以她的作品中经常出现电影片段、杂志、人名等看似无关的东西。此外,罗斯还喜欢在在没绷画框、没有涂底漆的画布,甚至是巨大的墙面上创作。她说,像广告牌、教堂装饰这样大尺寸的、可以延展的画面总是能让她感到更兴奋。 罗斯·怀利在她的工作室中2014年的时候,80岁的罗斯成为英国约翰摩尔斯绘画奖(The John Moores Prize)有史以来年龄最大的获奖者。在2018年的时候,她还被英国女王授予了大英帝国官佐勋章。但是在罗斯看来,自己的生活不过是穿自己想穿的,画自己想画的,做自己想做的事情而已。 磨时艺见,每晚9点,准时更新。
Rose Wylie and I talk about moving the large wet work on paper that she’s making now, how difficult it is to get on with work when you have so much time to just be in the studio and how Rose is using this time to look up other artists. Rose talks about her love of sticking rather than stitching and how she's a staple gun freak. We talk about what Rose is working on and about her wonderful late night drawings. We touch on her show at David Zwirner Hong Kong, "Painting a Noun" and her passion for Coleridge's poetry. Rose talks about being hands on and the difficulties of this approach. We discuss skirts, feet, and body image. Rose tells us what characters she's into right now and why she was taken with Snow White (contrast) and Elizabeth Taylor (because she was brittle, had mauve eyes and was all over the papers.) Rose speaks about text and we consider humour and being serious. To end, Rose proposes a new colour, green without blue and tells us about renaming her cat, now called Pete. Links: http://www.choiandlager.com/artist.php?artist_id=35&show_id=4 https://www.davidzwirner.com/exhibitions/rose-wylie-painting-noun-2020 https://www.serpentinegalleries.org/exhibitions-events/rose-wylie-quack-quack Image: Detail from the image discussed: Rose Wylie Bird, Butterfly & Worm 2015 Oil on Canvas 159 x 548 cm Private Collection --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/emma-cousin/support
Russell & Robert meet painter Rose Wylie, one of their all-time art heroes, at her Kent home-studio where she’s painting for a New York solo show opening later this year at David Zwirner. We discuss the impact of film on her painting including Gus Van Sant, why the early paintings of Cezanne are the greatest, painting people she respects such as Serena & Venus Williams, alchmey bottles, helping frogs cross the road, wild roses and letting your garden grow free. We learn about her longterm working relationship with Jari Lager & Union Gallery (now Choi & Lager) and her respect for artists such as Tal R, Alida Cervantes, Sam Doyle, Faith Ringgold, Kerry James Marhsall, Neo Rauch, David Hockney and Katherine Bernhardt. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
As part of our 2019 International Women’s Day programme, Feminist Time, Rose Wylie RA is joined by the Director of Tate Modern, Francis Morris to discuss her projects and achievements, and explore the difficulties she has encountered in the art world. Find out more about this year's International Women's Day programme: https://roy.ac/2VH74ml
Acclaimed painter Rose Wylie takes a keen interest in cinema, and references from film spill into her work. On 5 June 2016, in a discussion hosted by Art Writer Skye Sherwin, Wylie talked to artist filmmaker Ben Rivers, about painting, film, and being the subject of Rivers’ film portrait, What Means Something, which was screened after the discussion. https://www.whitstablebiennale.com/project/rose-wylie-ben-rivers-and-skye-sherwin-in-conversation/
A conversation about the importance of character, the value of mistakes, and painting from film. In the second pairing in David Zwirner’s Dialogues series, the critically-acclaimed painter—and recent recipient of the Queen’s OBE award—Rose Wylie talks with the actor Russell Tovey from BBC’s Being Human and HBO’s Looking. Wylie, an admirer of cinema, and Tovey, a fan and collector of Wylie’s work, engage in a conversation about improvisation, instincts, and creative influences that T Magazine describes as “charmingly off-the-cuff.” You can view Rose Wylie: Hullo, Hullo . . . at the Centro de Arte Contemporáneo in Málaga, Spain through September 9 and Rose Wylie: History Painting at Newlyn Art Gallery & The Exchange through September 15, 2018. For more of what’s to come on Dialogues, listen to our trailer or visit davidzwirner.com/podcast. This podcast is a partnership between David Zwirner and Slate Studios. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Dialogues | A podcast from David Zwirner about art, artists, and the creative process
A conversation about the importance of character, the value of mistakes, and painting from film. In the second pairing in David Zwirner’s Dialogues series, the critically-acclaimed painter—and recent recipient of the Queen’s OBE award—Rose Wylie talks with the actor Russell Tovey from BBC’s Being Human and HBO’s Looking. Wylie, an admirer of cinema, and Tovey, a fan and collector of Wylie’s work, engage in a conversation about improvisation, instincts, and creative influences that T Magazine describes as “charmingly off-the-cuff.” You can view Rose Wylie: Hullo, Hullo . . . at the Centro de Arte Contemporáneo in Málaga, Spain through September 9 and Rose Wylie: History Painting at Newlyn Art Gallery & The Exchange through September 15, 2018.
We delve into the history of Winnie-the-Pooh, check out Rose Wylie’s artwork at the Serpentine Sackler Gallery and Deborah Treisman talks about “the most gifted museum man on the West Coast”. We also meet chef Francesco Mazzei and Juliette Foster goes through the weekend papers.
A Christmas Carol is London's Old Vic Theatre's Christmas offering this year. It's a new version by Jack Thorne (who wrote Harry Potter and The Cursed Child) directed by Matthew Warchus and starring Rhys Ifans as Ebenezer Scrooge The Disaster Artist is a tribute to one of the worst films ever - Tommy Wisseau's The Room. If the original was such a stinker, can a film about it be funny about the ineptitude or just cruel? Elisa Lodato's novel An Unremarkable Body tells the story of a middle-aged daughter coming to terms with the death of her mother. There's an exhibition of work by Rose Wylie at London's Serpentine Galleries Crown Court was a daytime TV series which ran for 12 years from 1972. It's being resurrected with Judge Rinder as the gavel-banging star; Judge Judy meets 12 Angry men? Tom Sutcliffe's guests are Patrick Gale, Briony Hanson and John Mullan The producer is Oliver Jones.
How is the antiquities trade coping with increased focus on Middle East looting and new approaches to collecting? And Rose Wylie on the pleasures and struggles of painting. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Series in which two artists discuss creative questions. In this edition, painter Rose Wylie meets comedian Stewart Lee.