Saturday, 1 October 2016

The Courtauld Gallery - Book Now - Rodin and Dance: The Essence of Movement

The Courtauld Gallery
Visit The Courtauld Gallery in October
Opens 20 October 2016

By 1900, Auguste Rodin (1840-1917) was considered France’s greatest living artist, and managed a large studio producing bronzes and marbles for commissions around the world. However, his practice also took a more private and intimate turn, developing his long-term passion for capturing expressive movement in drawings and small scale sculptures.
This is the first major exhibition to explore Rodin’s fascination with dance and bodies in extreme acrobatic poses. It will explore a series of experimental sculptures known as the Dance Movements made in 1911, which offer a rare glimpse into Rodin’s unique working practices.
These stretching, leaping and twisting figures in terracotta and plaster are presented alongside a series of remarkable drawings in which Rodin explored movement and new forms of dance. They include the acrobatic models who posed for him in the studio as well as performers from the Royal Cambodian dance troupe who took Paris by storm.
While many of the drawings of dancers were exhibited within Rodin’s lifetime, the sculptures were seen only by his very closest circle of friends and supporters. They may be considered his last major project, reflecting how the final years of his life were a period of playful experimentation.
Organised in collaboration with:
Exhibition generously supported by:
Friends of The Courtauld
International Music and Art Foundation
Anonymous in memory of Melvin R. Seiden
The Daniel Katz Gallery, London
Stuart and Bianca Roden
Henry Moore Foundation logo
Saturday Study Day

Rodin and Dance: The Essence of Movement Study Day
29 October 2016

Join curator Dr Alexandra Gerstein and colleagues to find out more about the artist’s graphic and sculptural working processes, about avant-garde approaches to the human body in motion, about changing attitudes to the ballet, and about the influence of dancers from Cambodia on Rodin and his contemporaries in Paris.

A provisional programme for the day can be downloaded
Coming Soon: A Civic Utopia: Architecture and the City in France, 1765-1837
Opens 8 October 2016

This exhibition considers the place of architecture in establishing the notion of public life. It brings together an outstanding selection of architectural drawings of public building and public space in France that pursued the Enlightenment idea of a ‘scientific’ city, describing rational, hygienic and symbolic expressions of an ideal civic life.

Organised by Drawing Matter Trust in collaboration with The Courtauld Gallery as part of UTOPIA 2016: A Year of Imagination and Possibility.
Showcasing Art History 
Showcasing Art History is a series of 25 lectures on Tuesday evenings over three, free-standing terms. You are welcome to attend all three terms, a combination of any two terms or just one term.

The series aims to deliver current art-historical thinking in an accessible manner and is open to anyone over the age of 18. Our speakers are specialists in their field and are drawn from members of Courtauld staff and from other leading institutions.

 The new season starts on 4 October 2016.

Courtauld Annual Book Sale with Donations from Brian Sewell 
3 - 7 October 2016

The much loved annual Courtauld book sale returns once again this autumn, offering thousands of books at amazing prices. All proceeds (over £100,000 since its inception) going to support student travel grants.

Special for this year are donations from the late Brian Sewell, who left his library to The Courtauld Institute of Art. 
October Talks
Lunchtime Talks Are Back!
Join us on on Mondays and Fridays

Having taken a break over the summer, we are pleased to announce that our lunchtime talks are back from Monday 3 October, 13.15 - 13.30.

Join Courtauld Student Maeve O'Donnell to discover our collection of French 14th Century Ivories on Monday 3 October 2016. 
            


Curators' Talks
Sunday Talks
Sunday Music
Wednesday 5 Oct
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.
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.
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.
What's on elsewhere
COLOUR: The art and science of illuminated manuscripts
The Middle - Tom Ellis

Picasso Portraits

New Spaces at Sir John Soane's Museum
30 July - 30 December
Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge
15 September - 27 November
The Wallace Collection
  
06 October - 05 February
National Portrait Gallery
Sir John Soane's Museum
COLOUR showcases 150 exceptional manuscripts from the Fitzwilliam's collection - the finest and largest museum collection of illuminated manuscripts in existence. Travel from 8th century Northumbria to 17th century Nepal and see unique works ranging from a Parisian medieval encyclopaedia to the ABC of a five-year-old princess, and local treasures like the Macclesfield Psalter.
This autumn the Wallace Collection presents The Middle, an innovative exhibition featuring newly commissioned works by British artist Tom Ellis. Explore the artist’s ambitious pairing of figurative paintings and self-made furniture.
From celebrated masterpieces to works never seen before in the UK, discover the astonishing variety of Pablo Picasso's portraits of family, friends and lovers in the National Portrait Gallery’s major autumn exhibition.


The Soane Museum has recently completed its 7-year, £7million restoration, returning the Museum to its full glory for the first time since Soane’s death in 1837. Visitors can now see reinstated lost spaces including the Roman Catacombs and the Regency-era kitchens.

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Malick Sidibé: The Eye of Modern Mali
From 6 October 2016
Somerset House
Terrace Rooms, South Wing
      
Organised around three themes, the exhibition presents a selection of the late Malian photographer’s iconic original prints from the 1960s and 1970s, capturing the energy and exuberance in the capital city of this young, newly independent nation.

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