Late at Tate Britain: GBAD

Here’s a full breakdown of the events for Late at Tate Britain this Friday night. As you can see, it’s going to be immense. See you there!

Late at Tate Britain
Great British Art Debate
Friday 1 July 2011

Debates: Art in Public

Join the lively debate around Britishness and art in four installations around the gallery recreating iconic British settings for discussion – a pub, barber shop, bus and living room. Curated by young people’s groups from Tate Britain, Norwich Castle Museum & Art Gallery, Tyne & Wear Archives & Museums and Museums Sheffield.

The Duchess of Cambridge: Genres and Transformations
18.30 – 19.30 and 20.00 – 21.00

Peggy Mitchell look-alike gets the conversation going with a pub quiz testing your knowledge of British art.

Cut and thrust with Faisal Abdu’Allah: Art for Whom?
18.30 – 19.30 and 20.00 – 21.00

Artist and barber Faisal Abdu’Allah’s work explores popular culture iconography to reposition values and ideologies. Debate art and celebrity culture in the hair salon with an immersive soundscape from Faisal Abdu’Allah’s own barbershop, and visual backdrop designed by young people.

Live Salon with Faisal Abdu'Allah, BP Saturdays: Going Public. Photo by Richard Eaton

Robin & Partridge’s Great Debate Bus
Millbank Entrance
18.30 – 19.30 and 20.00 – 21.00

Join comedy bus conductors Robin & Partridge on the upper deck of the red Route Master to decide if art is for you.

Back to Basics
Millbank Reading Area
18.30 – 19.30 and 20.00 – 21.00

Kick back, relax and play arty scrabble in the living room, and join an informal discussion around how you relate to art on a personal level. Questions on the TV set ask: how has art influenced your life?

Into Watercolour
Manton Lawn
18.30 – 21.30

Play with water and colour! Join artists Naomi Leake and Carey Robinson in an open-air workshop to learn traditional watercolour techniques and experiment with water-based media in new and innovative ways, alongside Watercolour artists Neal Tait and Nicola Durvasula.
Live demonstrations: 18.30-18.40, 19.15-19.25, 20.00-20.10 & 20.40-20.50

Artists’ Talks

Manton Studio
19.00-19.40 Neil Tate
20.00-20.40 Nicola Durvasula

Contemporary Watercolour artists Neal Tait and Nicola Durvasula share an insight into their practice, and how they use the medium to explore memory and imagination.
Limited tickets available from the Manton Information desk, first-come, first-served from 18.00

Film

Paint on Film
Auditorium
18.30-18.50, 19.00-19.20, 19.30-19.50
20.00-20.20, 20.30-20.50 & 21.00-21.20

Watch rarely screened, experimental artist films that explore the film as a painted canvas by Walter Ungerer, Stan Brakhage, and George Barber selected from the LUX collection.

Introduction to Oobieland
Walter Ungerer 1969
16mm
9 mins

Part of a series, Walter Ungerer painted over already recorded footage and directly onto blank film to create an unsettling exploration of gateways in a mystical place with strange creatures.

Black Ice
Stan Brakhage 1994
16mm
2 mins

This step-printed, hand-painted film is a meditation on the artist’s careful steps taken outdoors during winter after hitting his head and losing sight slipping on black ice.

Stellar
Stan Brakhage 1993
16mm
2 min

In this hand-painted film, paint is composed and re-photographed microscopically to suggest galactic forms in a space of stars.

Automotive Action Painting
George Barber 2006
DVD
6 min

Early one morning a man parks his van, takes out pots of paint and throws colour on the road; slowly the passing cars begin to create an abstract smear of vibrant colours.

Music

Colours of Sound
Ben Osbourne and Your Mum
Historic Collection
18.30-21.30

Reflecting the evening’s contemporary watercolour theme, Noise of Art presents a DJ and visuals set that uses washes, percussive details and abstract melody to merge an array of genres, with evolving imagery from Your Mum to match Ben Osbourne’s music.

Watercolour animation

Octagon
18.30-21.30
Films shown on a loop

Frànçois + The Atlas Mountains
Be Water
DVD
3 min

Hold on Twice
DVD
2 min

Frànçois Marry’s animations are painstakingly crafted vignettes made with ink, paper and an old video camera: buildings grow from the ground, lovers are attacked by books or lifted into the air on pollution clouds, all scored with a minimalist soundtrack by Frànçois + The Atlas Mountains.

Frànçois + The Atlas Mountains © Frànçois Marry 2011

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Late at Tate Britain: Restless Times

Late at Tate, July 2011

Taking inspiration from the display Restless Times: Art in Britain 1914–1945 this evening explores the vital creativity that Britain produced during the great uncertainty and turbulent change of the first half of the 20th century through performances, music, talks and films. Does the art of the past say anything about our own troubled, restless and vibrant life today?

Tate Britain will stay open until 22.00. You can explore the collection displays, see The Vorticists exhibition or enjoy a drink at the pay bar.

Crochet Bouquet
Collection display galleries
18.00–21.30
Artist Michael Needham has collaborated with ladies from Open Age Hub in Pimlico to produce a crochet bouquet. A mass of yellow flowers have been stitched and assembled over the past few weeks to create a ready-to-wear garland, and you are invited to watch this garment grow.

Rag&Bow: The Roaming Vintage Store™ interactive fashion experience
Octagon
18.00–21.30
Have your photograph taken as a 1920s Bright Young Person or a 2011 New Wave Club Dandy/Pinup. Delve into their dressing up box to complete the look. View the subsequent photographs projected live onto the Octagon’s walls.  Also look out for Rag&Bow’s subverted take on the classic 1930s confectionery seller dispensing packets of provocative thought and wisdom.

Stimmung
Performance by Sam Belinfante
North Duveen
18.00–21.30
Sam Belinfante presents a new sound and visual installation featuring amateur crystal radio enthusiasts and their machines with a new scored work to be performed live by EXAUDI, one of Britain’s leading contemporary music ensembles. The work will explore the full breadth of the human voice as singers weave in and out of the crackling, whistling and humming emanating from crystal radios dotted around them.

Propaganda Films
North Duveens
18.00–21.30
Looped throughout the evening

Propaganda by Balloons 1918, 2 min, Ministry of Information
British soldiers launching balloons carrying propaganda leaflets to drift over enemy lines, near Béthune on the  Western Front on 4 September 1918.

Albert’s Savings 1940, 6 min, Ministry of Information
A homily on the duty to save, in the guise of one of the ‘Albert’ rhyming monologues.

Dig for Victory 1941, 6 min, Ministry of Information
A short appeal to the public to grow vegetables.

The Careless Sneezer 1942, 1.20 min, Ministry of Information
Second World War Ministry of Information newsreel trailer featuring entertainer Cyril Fletcher performing an amusing rhyme to encourage the public to stop the spread of diseases.

Make Do and Mend 1943, 1.20 min, Ministry of Information
Second World War British Ministry of Information newsreel trailer, in support of the Make Do and Mend campaign.

Total run time 15 mins

All films courtesy of the Trustees of the Imperial War Museum

Restless Times Talk
19.30–20.00
Russell Carr will lead an informal discussion in the Restless Times display with the social commentator Owen Jones, author of Chavs: The Demonisation of the Working Class and Owen Hatherley, author of A Guide to the New Ruins of Great Britain. They will explore the question: ‘Does the art of the past say anything about our own troubled, restless and vibrant life today?’

Graffiti Knitting with Stitch London and Knit the City
Manton Foyer
18.00–21.30
Join stitching community Stitch London, and Knit the City for a graffiti knitting workshop, inspired by ‘make do and mend’ but with a woolly street-art twist. Members of Stitch London will teach all comers how to knit simple graffiti butterflies and sheep, while Knit the City’s stitchers will be installing their woolly mischief around the museum.

Bandwagon Barbershop
Manton foyer
19.00, 20.00, 21.00
Get in to the swing of things with barbershop tunes from the 1920s,
30s and 40s!

Millbank Guided Tour
Millbank entrance
18.30, 19.30, 20.30
All tours last approximately 50 mins
Artist Melissa Bliss’s work explores people and places and internal and external geographies. Her work is often created through participatory processes in live interactions, audience participation, conversations and collaborations. For Late At Tate she has created a guided tour of the social and political history of Britain in the years 1914–1945 through the milieu of Millbank. The tour will reflect themes from the Restless Times display exploring those buildings and external spaces that existed at that time, drawing out the resonances of events that shaped the area including the First World War, the devastating 1928 flood and subsequent slum clearance, and the lives of people who lived and worked there.

Tickets are limited and will be issued on a first-come first-served basis. Tickets can be collected from 18.00 at the Millbank Information desk

Film programme
Auditorium
18.30, 19.30, 20.30
Total run time 45 min

Listen to Britain, 1942, 19 min, Humphrey Jennings
A depiction of life in wartime England during the Second World War. Director Humphrey Jennings visits many aspects of civilian life and of the turmoil and privation caused by the war.

Night Shift, 1942, 14 min, Jack Chambers
Directed by Jack Chambers and produced by Paul Rotha, this short documentary depicts night workers in an armaments factory making tank components for the war effort.

Westward Ho!, 1940, 8.23 min, Thorold Dickinson
Made to emphasise the importance of getting children out of harm’s way in the early years of the Blitz, this short films shows children being evacuated from London to Torquay during the early years of the war.

All films courtesy of the Trustees of the Imperial War Museum

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Watercolour at Camp Bestival

Event name: Tate Summer Festival Tour: Camp Bestival

Date and time: 28 – 30 July 2011

Venue: Camp Bestival, Lullworth Castle, Dorset

Description: We’re breaking Watercolour out of the gallery! Come see some art in a field and get your handy dirty with some painting fun. We’ll be bringing a watercolour workshop, a debate panel led by Richard Strange, and a roving Watercolour artist who will be attempting to capture the festival with your help…

Admission: Free with festival ticket

Contact: Camp Bestival Official Site

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GBAD at Underage Festival, London

Event name: Tate Summer Festival Tour: Underage

Date and time: 5 August 2011, 11am – 8pm

Venue: Underage Festival, Victoria Park, London

Description: We’re breaking out of the gallery! Smart art folk from our Young Tate Collectives will be bringing their own twist on the Great British Art Debate to the under-18 crowd at Underage. Come down and say hello in the GBAD tent while you’re enjoying incredible music from the likes of Frankie and the Heartstrings and Janelle Monae!

We’re also part of the Youth Market, bringing creative young people the chance to share their passion in a unique way. Submit your creations to the site by 10th July, and at the festival the winners will be given a special market pitch to show off their imagination, ideas and collaborations. Youth Market wants you to make your own boundaries for what defines creativity – from fashion design to graphic art, 3D video production or even DJs!

Admission: Free with festival ticket (13-17s only!)

Contact: Official Underage Festival site

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John Martin: Painting the Apocalypse

John Martin was one of the most popular artists of the 19th Century. So why have most people never heard of him?

If ever there was an artist whose reputation deserves restoration, it’s John Martin (1789–1854). Described by The Times as ‘the painter with the power to stop even a bored teenager in his gallery-traipsing tracks’, Martin’s dramatic images have inspired everything over the years from sci-fi films to heavy metal album covers. Yet, compared to contemporaries like Constable and Turner, he was largely snubbed by the art establishment of his day – John Ruskin was a particularly vocal critic! Instead, Martin developed his audience from the grass roots – relying on an eye for enthralling subjects and tireless touring of his paintings to build his popularity.

This exhibition, the first major show of Martin’s work in over 30 years, will showcase some of his most dramatic oil paintings, including Belshazzar’s Feast and The Great Day of His Wrath. Appearing in Sheffield before it tours to Tate Britain later this year, John Martin, Painting the Apocalypse will also explore Martin’s enduring influence on cinema and popular culture.

John Martin, Painting the Apocalypse is part of the Great British Art Debate, a partnership project between Museums Sheffield, Tate, Norfolk Museums and Archaeology Service, and Tyne & Wear Archives & Museums.

Find out more about the show at Museums Sheffield.

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Captivate your imagination: visit Restless Times

Once in a while a display happens along which seems to capture the imagination and encapsulate the mood of both museum assistant and visitor alike. Restless Times, now showing at Tate Britain is very much in that mould. A pared-down version of a successful exposition first shown at the Millennium Gallery, Sheffield and Norwich Castle in 2010/2011, it is grouped around four key themes: Experiences of War, Finding Home, Daily Struggles and Inner Worlds. It offers up a glimpse into the artistic production of a nation passing through profound political and socio-economic upheavals in the years 1914 to 1945.

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