Latest News
Internationally renowned painter Rose Wylie creates new work for Plymouth in multi-site exhibition
Thursday, 5 April, 2018 — Following a packed out opening of award-winning painter Rose Wylie's exhibition 'History Painting' at The Gallery and Plymouth Arts Centre, we highly recommend you visit the multi-site show, on until 30 May 2018. See all the photos here...
<h5>With past exhibitions at Tate Britain, Turner Contemporary and The Serpentine Galleries, we had an exciting opening last week for internationally renowned painter Rose Wylie and her multi-site exhibition ‘History Painting’ in The Gallery and at Plymouth Arts Centre.</h5>
Photos by Dom Moore.
<p><strong>Missed the opening?</strong> Don’t worry the exhibition runs until <strong>Wednesday 30 May 2018</strong>.</p>
<p><strong>Award-winning British painter Rose Wylie</strong> is the subject of ‘History Painting’, a new multi-site exhibition at <strong><a href="https://plymouthartscentre.org/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Plymouth Arts Centre</a></strong> and <strong>The Gallery at Plymouth College of Art</strong>, featuring a cycle of new work about the Mayflower voyage, created for this exhibition between 2015 and 2017. These paintings draw on the artist’s memories of first learning about the Pilgrims as a young child in the 1930s, and reflect on how interpretations of history change across the ages.</p>
<p>Rose Wylie is best known for creating <strong>colourful, large-scale, figurative paintings</strong> that are <strong>intelligent, funny, and quietly political</strong>. These are often made from memory and draw on a wide range of cultural references from history, fashion, and Hollywood to mythology, news imagery, sports and literature.</p>
<p>The common thread linking these fields is her interest in how images evolve and accumulate meaning, becoming familiar, iconic and part of the narrative of art, popular culture and wider history.</p>
“History Painting by Rose Wylie is the most eye tingling, heart singingly, utterly delightful exhibition and it's here in Plymouth! So much verve, vitality, rawness...”
Dr Sarah Chapman
<p><strong>Ben Borthwick, Artistic Director of Plymouth Arts Centre</strong> <strong>said: </strong>“I have been talking to Rose about her work for over a decade but never had a situation where we could do a show together. So when I started at Plymouth Arts Centre in 2014 this was one of the first exhibitions I commissioned. I knew Rose would be interested in Plymouth’s histories and myths and am delighted she has made a new cycle of paintings about the Mayflower to be shown with existing work on a range of themes that speak to Plymouth’s magnificent history and gritty present.</p>
<p>“The plan was always to present the exhibition in two sites to create contrast between Plymouth Arts Centre’s domestic scale galleries which are identical to the proportions of Rose’s studio, and The Gallery at Plymouth College of Art which is a clean white cube. I wanted to explore how display conditions change perceptions, but also think about how work looks in spaces of production compared to spaces of display.”</p>
<p>The works selected for Plymouth Arts Centre and The Gallery at Plymouth College of Art focus on Rose’s interests in film, fashion and history and respond to the context of the two galleries, their architecture, location and programmes.</p>
"I am delighted she [Rose] has made a new cycle of paintings about the Mayflower to be shown with existing work on a range of themes that speak to Plymouth’s magnificent history and gritty present."
Ben Borthwick
Photos by Dom Moore.
“Big thoughtful subjects presented with sheer joy!”
Blair Todd
<p><strong>Hannah Rose, Exhibitions Manager for The Gallery at Plymouth College of Art, said:</strong> “We’re really excited to bring such an internationally-renowned artist to the South West for the first time. Rose has shown work nationally and internationally, including her recent widely acclaimed show at The Serpentine Galleries, and the fact that she has created new work for our multi-site show makes this an unmissable opportunity. We’re sure that seeing her paintings up close will be an amazing experience for our audiences.”</p>
<p>Plymouth Arts Centre present Wylie’s new Mayflower paintings alongside themes the artist has painted for many years that are central to Plymouth’s history, including the <strong>Tudor period</strong>, <strong>the Blitz</strong>, and the city as a <strong>seaside resort</strong>.</p>
<p>There will also be a selection of Rose’s ‘film notes’ paintings in reference to Plymouth Arts Centre’s 70-year history as a gallery/cinema. Ben Rivers’ film What Means Something (2015) reflects on this friendship with Rose, her work, and artistic processes they have in common. It will be shown as part of the exhibition.</p>
<p>At The Gallery at Plymouth College of Art, focus is given to the <strong>depiction of the female form</strong>, with a series of paintings (from 2002 to 2016) presenting pin-up girls, fashion models, sports players and a number of self-portraits.</p>
<p>This exhibition will tour to Newlyn Art Gallery and The Exchange, 9 June to 15 September 2018.</p>
<p>The exhibition includes a filmed interview between Rose and Hans Ulrich Obrist, Artistic Director of Serpentine Galleries, made for her recent exhibition QUACK QUACK.</p>
<p>Photos by <strong><a href="https://www.dommoore.co.uk/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Dom Moore</a></strong>. </p>