Wednesday, 1 June 2016

June at The Courtauld Gallery

The Courtauld Gallery
Visit The Courtauld Gallery in June
Coming Soon
Opens 16 June 2016

Georgiana Houghton (1814-1884) was a Spiritualist medium who, in the 1860s and 70s, produced an astonishing series of abstract watercolours. Detailed explanations on the back of the works declare that her hand was guided by various spirits, including several Renaissance artists, as well as higher angelic beings.

In 1871 Houghton rented a prestigious gallery space in Bond Street and presented 155 of her spirit drawings to a perplexed London audience. The Critic from The Era newspaper pronounced it to be “The most astonishing exhibition in London at the present moment.” The Daily News likened the works to “tangled threads of coloured wool” and concluded that “They deserve to be seen as the most extraordinary and instructive example of artistic aberration.” The exhibition proved to be a commercial failure and nearly bankrupted Houghton.  Although she continued to make spirit drawings after the exhibition, her ambition of popularising the practice was not realised. Today, less than fifty of her works are known.

In this exhibition The Courtauld Gallery explores this astounding series of largely abstract Victorian watercolours and offers visitors a unique opportunity to view remarkable works which have not been shown in the UK for nearly 150 years.

Organised in collaboration with:
£9.4m HLF Award Secured
£9.4m has been secured from the Heritage Lottery Fund (HLF) towards Phase One of a major transformation programme, “Courtauld Connects”.

“Courtauld Connects” overall will be a £50m project. It is the biggest programme of development since moving to Somerset House in 1989. Phase One will focus on The Courtauld’s collection and built heritage, its conservation work and its public engagement, both in Somerset House and nationally. The HLF award enables The Courtauld to progress with its planning, fundraising and delivery of Phase One, with its significant public benefits including:

• Additional space for the display of The Courtauld Gallery’s growing permanent collection
• The Great Room restored and represented as the culmination of the visitor experience
• Improved presentation of the collection in the historic Fine Rooms

Phase Two of “Courtauld Connects” will be a £20m programme, which aims to provide state of the art facilities for research, learning and teaching.
New acquisition on display: Jasper Johns - The Seasons 
The Courtauld Gallery is delighted to announce a significant addition to its modern collections - a major series of prints by the American artist Jasper Johns (born 1930), The Seasons.

This fantastic body of work comes from the generosity of Barbara Bertozzi Castelli, the widow of Leo Castelli, the legendary New York dealer who ‘discovered’ Johns in the 1950s. It was with Castelli that Johns first exhibited The Seasons series in 1987. The works bear a personal dedication —‘For Leo’— in pencil on each sheet. This gift was made possible by The American Foundation for The Courtauld Institute of Art.

This new acquisition reaffirms The Courtauld Gallery’s commitment to extending its historical collections further into the twentieth century and beyond. This is a unique opportunity to view Johns’ work, rarely shown in the United Kingdom.
Find out more  >
What's on in the Drawings Gallery 
Ornament by Design, until 12 June 2016
Regarding Trees, 18 June - 25 Sept 2016
This display explores the ways in which ornament transforms buildings, objects, and other surfaces into something beautiful: objects of desire. 

Ornament by Design presents a range of seventeenth- and eighteenth-century French drawings: elevations and sections of buildings, ornamental motifs, garden ornaments, ceiling decorations, designs for frames and architectural capriccios. They illustrate the variety of forms that ornament assumed and the functions it performed in the built environment of the ancien régime.
In this display we invite you to explores artists’ enduring fascination with trees.
   
Regarding Trees ranges from the early sixteenth to the mid nineteenth centuries and includes works by Fra Bartolommeo, Jan van Goyen, Claude Lorrain and John Constable, among others. It takes the framework of Gilpin’s treatise as its starting point, moving from portraits of individual trees to depictions of trees within landscapes and concluding with a selection of forest scenes. Together, they offer an insight into some of the many roles trees have played over the centuries.
Book now   >
Book now   >    
Donate to the 2016 Annual Fund and help us continue the philanthropic vision of our founder, Samuel Courtauld
Please support our work by giving to the 2016 Courtauld Annual Fund.
                                      
Last year we raised over £130,000. By making a gift today, you join our many other supporters, friends and alumni in making an ever greater collective impact in 2016.
                     
Whatever the amount you give, your generosity supports Gallery renovations, special displays, the care of our world-class collections as well as conservation and research projects. Continuing the philanthropic vision of our founder Samuel Courtauld, we help students in need of financial assistance and offer an outstanding public programme to learners from all backgrounds. 
                    
Thank you for joining in and donating whatever you can.
Donate now >  
Confusion of Tongues: Art and the Limits of Language
The Courtauld's MA Curating the Art Museum students have curated the exhibition Confusion of Tongues: Art and the Limits of Language at The Courtauld Gallery. Inspired by the complex and multi–layered narrative of Thomas More's Utopia, this art exhibition explores the creative power of language and its limits as means of communication.  
   
Through a selection of works by modern and contemporary artists such as Oskar Kokoschka, Imogen Stidworthy, and Hamish Fulton, it highlights the limits of language, yet it also suggests that within misunderstanding, difference and distance there exists a powerful space for creativity and imagination.  

This exhibition is part of UTOPIA 2016: A Year of Imagination and Possibility, a vibrant programme of events celebrating the 500th anniversary of Thomas More’s famous work Utopia at Somerset House.  
Exhibition open 16 June – 17 July 2016.                                
#ConfusionOfTongues
Book now >  
Who's the Daddy!
With Father’s Day just a few weeks away, why not draw inspiration from our collection and find the perfect present he’s sure to love.

Head to The Courtauld Gallery Shop for inspirational ideas to make your dad's day.  Why not celebrate Father’s Day by treating him to tickets to the fantastic new exhibition Georgiana Houghton: Spirit Drawings or even better give him the gift of membership, allowing you and your dad to enjoy a year full of benefits together.

June Talks 
Curator's Talks
Curators Talks
Wednesday 1 June
17.00 - 17.45

Join us on the first Wednesday of every month for a curator’s talk on the artwork, themes and ideas behind our latest exhibition. Talks are included in your admission ticket.
Lunchtime Talks
Sunday Tours
Every Monday & Friday
13.15 - 13.30

Lunchtime talks are delivered by students and researchers at The Courtauld Institute of Art.  They are informal and an interesting way of looking closely at the works in our collection.
Included in your admission ticket.
Sunday Talks
Lunchtime Tours
Sundays
15.00 - 15.45

Explore highlights from the latest exhibition, or works from the collection, as they are examined by postgraduate students from The Courtauld Institute of Art. Included in your admission ticket, see our events calendar for dates.
Sunday Music
Sundays
15.00 - 15.45

Listen to performances inspired by the collection as you enjoy your visit.

Included in your admission ticket, see our events calendar for dates.
Find out more   >  
What's on elsewhere
'The Cloud-Capped Towers': Shakespeare in Soane's Architectural Imagination
Masterpiece London 
2016 
1816: Prints by Turner, Goya and Cornelius
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Richard Forster: Levittown
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Sir John Soane’s Museum

Until 8 October 2016


To mark the 400th anniversary of William Shakespeare’s death, this exhibition is the first of its kind to examine the influence the great playwright had on the life and work of Sir John Soane.

Admission free
South Grounds, The Royal Hospital Chelsea
30 June - 6 July 2016, Preview 29 June 2016
      
Masterpiece London, the leading international cross-collecting fair for art, antiques and design, has become a must-attend event at the heart of the capital’s busy summer art and auction season. 
The Fitzwilliam Museum
       
Until 31 July 2016

A look across Europe at three series of prints by major artists published in 1816, the year of the founding of the Fitzwilliam. See Goya’s Tauromaquia, books eleven and twelve of Turner’sLiber Studiorum, and Peter Cornelius’s large-scaleIllustrations to Goethe’s Faust.
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Last chance to see: Degas' Dancers: A Courtauld Masterpiece
Utopia Fair

Until 19 June 2016

In this exclusive display, in collaboration with The Courtauld Gallery, see Edgar Degas’ painting Two Dancers on a Stage alongside three of his related works. A founding member of the Impressionist group, Degas was fascinated by ballet dancers and movement.
The Edmond J. Safra Fountain Court, Somerset House
24 – 26 June 2016
      
Get involved in utopian ways of living in the 21st century as the courtyard is filled with contemporary utopian movements from around the UK. Tuck into tasty food from social enterprise cafes and explore interactive displays, events and activities that look at topics including the environment and city-living, community inclusiveness, fashion, and arts and craft practices. Cash only onsite.

Free admission