15
February
2024
|
12:24
Europe/London

Multi-award-winning wood engraver guides art lovers through space and time at City of London’s Guildhall Art Gallery

Offering art lovers a fresh perspective on London, its architecture, and geography, Guildhall Art Gallery celebrates the work of artist and specialist wood engraver,

Anne Desmet RA, in its forthcoming major exhibition. 

‘Anne Desmet: Kaleidoscope/London’ at the City of London Corporation’s Guildhall Art Gallery sees the artist slicing into prints focused on London from her earlier wood-engravings, linocuts and hand-drawn lithographs to make a new series of digital collages, inspired by looking at a fragmented view of the world through a toy kaleidoscope.

Spanning over three decades of Desmet’s documentation of London through the mediums of wood engraving and mixed-media printed collage, the exhibition will feature 150 works, including 41 London-themed kaleidoscopic prints created exclusively for this exhibition, and a selection of tools and engraved wood blocks.

Desmet’s prints create a unique dialogue between time and change, depicting the evolution of urban landscapes - from ancient Rome and Pompeii to London.

One of the stand-out art works will be a complex collage, ‘Fires of London’, created using 18 razor-clam shells to present a theme of the many historic fires of London over the last 1,500 years. The work will be acquired for the art gallery’s permanent collection.

The exhibition, which runs from 12 April to 8 September, has been curated by Anne Desmet and the City of London Corporation’s Head of Guildhall Art Gallery, Elizabeth Scott. Admission will be ‘Pay What You Can.’

Desmet is only the third artist to be elected to the prestigious Royal Academy of Arts in London for working in the medium of wood engraving. To date, Desmet has exhibited her work in over 50 solo shows, including five major museum exhibitions in the UK and overseas.  

Printmaker and wood engraver, Anne Desmet, said:

“Many of the collages were made in 2022 while I was undergoing treatment for breast cancer and, consequently, they reflect something of a wild scattergun of thoughts that were running through my mind at that time, such as escape, possible new worlds, and the climate crisis.

“The framework for those thoughts was inspired by a kaleidoscope toy that I had bought at the Sir John Soane’s Museum some years ago, which breaks up whatever view you’re looking at into extraordinary triangulated repeat-patterns.

“I set about applying a kaleidoscope lens to my London imagery to create new work for the exhibition at Guildhall Art Gallery. By seeing the city anew and with a sense of its unexpected possibilities, I hope that my work will inspire optimism and constructive thinking in our uncertain times.”

Chair of the City of London Corporation’s Culture, Heritage, and Libraries Committee, Munsur Ali, said:

“Many visitors to Guildhall Art Gallery may be intrigued that wood, that most natural and tactile of materials, provides the focus for its next exhibition, which we expect to be very popular with its followers and admirers, as well as those who discover this beautiful gallery for the first time.  

“It will be an absolute joy to see how Anne Desmet’s vivid imagination, life experience, and highly skilled hands have helped create such evocative work, some of it never seen before.”

Anne Desmet: Kaleidoscope/London is an integral part of the City’s arts and cultural offering and forms part of the City of London Corporation's Destination City programme, which sets out a vision for the Square Mile to become a world-leading leisure destination for UK and international visitors, workers, and residents to enjoy.

The exhibition will be followed by another solo exhibition by a woman artist, ‘Evelyn De Morgan: Pioneering Artist in Victorian London’, which will open in November 2024. The exhibition will celebrate the legacy of pioneering artist Evelyn De Morgan and as well as featuring some of her masterpieces painted and exhibited in Victorian London, it will reveal the results of recent scientific analyses by the Courtauld Institute of Art that shed new light on her materials and working methods.

The City of London Corporation is the fourth largest funder of heritage and cultural activities in the UK and invests over £130m every year. The organisation manages a range of world-class cultural and heritage institutions, including the Barbican Centre, Tower Bridge, Guildhall School of Music & Drama, Guildhall Art Gallery, London Metropolitan Archives, and Keats House. It also supports the London Symphony Orchestra and the Museum of London.

For more information, please visit www.thecityofldn.com/kaleidoscope 

ENDS

For more information, please contact:

Matilda Haymes, matilda.haymes@four.agency

About the City of London Corporation:

The City of London Corporation is the governing body of the Square Mile dedicated to a vibrant and thriving City, supporting a diverse and sustainable London within a globally successful UK. www.cityoflondon.gov.uk 

About Anne Desmet RA: 

Printmaker Anne Desmet RA is only the third artist to be elected to the Royal Academy for the wood engraving medium in the RA’s 256-year history. Desmet studied at the Ruskin School of Drawing and Fine Art, University of Oxford and London’s Central School of Art and Design. She was awarded a scholarship at the British School at Rome in 1989 and she is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Painter-Printmakers and the Art Workers’ Guild. Desmet has had over 50 solo shows. These include five major museum exhibitions in the UK and overseas and her work has won over 40 national and international awards over her 35-year career to date. Her works are widely represented in national and international public and private collections and she has undertaken commissions for the British Museum, National Gallery, British Library, V&A, Sotheby’s and the Royal Mint.

About Guildhall Art Gallery:

The historic Guildhall Art Gallery originally opened in 1886 and is home to City of London’s magnificent art collection. Particularly rich in Victorian art and ranging from Pre-Raphaelites to depictions of London’s colourful past, the Gallery’s basement houses the remains of London’s Roman Amphitheatre, dating from AD70. The Gallery also owns one of the largest oil paintings in Britain, John Singleton Copley’s Defeat of the Floating Batteries at Gibraltar (1783 – 1791), which is on permanent display.

Guildhall Art Gallery is open from Monday to Sunday, 10am to 5pm (last admission, 4.45pm). Guildhall Yard, London, EC2V 5AE. Free admission to the permanent collection. Booking recommended. Tel: 020 7332 3700