Gallery run 20th January

Plinth shortlist and along Thames.

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Andrea Zittel at Sadie Coles HQ in a group show exploring rooms as psychic spaces. This is part flotation tank and part survival space.

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Michael Andrews at Gagosian Gallery with 5 series of paintings including one of Uluru or AyersRock.

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Charles Avery at Pilar Corrias with more drawings from his imaginary island.

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Bright sun today casting a mysterious green glow thanks to a nearby building.

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Huma Bahbah of Stephen Friedman Gallery showing as a short-listed artist for the 4th plinth. The artist is inspired by science fiction and ancient cities.

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Heidi Bucher who shows at the Approach Gallery featured here in a group show at Sadie Coles HQ featuring rooms as psychic spaces. This is a latex imprint of her father’s study.

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Adrian Paci at Frith Street Gallery with a series of drawings on found black board materials.

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Sarah Lucas at Sadie Coles HQ with a smoking room fashioned from tabloids headlines many of which I remember from the 90’s.

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Photograph of the The Shard placed by Tom Wolseley in the entrance hall of his exhibition. Two hall mirrors make for an interesting viewpoint. Vertical Horizons is the title of his work.

Gallery run 6th November

Regent’s Canal to Hackney. Plus Peckham galleries.

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Zeng Fanzhi at Frieze 2016 sculpture park.

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Antony Gormley at White Cube with interactive sculptures containing body sized gaps.

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Sam Porritt at Vitrine Gallery

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Patrick Caulfield at The Approach.

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Virginia Overton at White Cube with a very warm wood burner.

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Regents Canal.

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Piotr Lakomy The Sunday Painter with sculptures made from high tech aluminium honeycomb.

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Jean Dubuffet at Frieze 2016 sculpture exhibition.

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Amalia Ulman at Arcadia Missa with a Labour Dance. A new gallery in Peckham.

Gallery run 22nd September

This week West to East. Then canal to Limehouse. Plus additional previous run to Casa Abierta at the Argentine Embassador’s residence.

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Shezad Dawood Kalimpong at Timothy Taylor with images from past and present of this small town in Bengal worked together.

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Amalia Pica of Herald Street showing at Casa Abierta.

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Celia Paul at Victoria Miro. Wow! There is really very little there to create this striking image.

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Erik Lindman at Almine Rech with steel sheet and paint images. The windows were opened to the gallery and the light coming through them accentuated the reflections on the metal including a line cut with angle grinder.

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Tacita Dean at Frith Street Gallery filming David Hockney in his studio having a cig break.

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Nigel Cooke at Pace Gallery with images transforming nature into iconic images of fire and the skull on base layers but layered atop with innocent flourishes from 19th century romanticism.

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Alison Katz at The Approach with paintings that match up in part to stories she tells on the press release about road trip adventures and other experiences of travel and discovery.

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John Cage musical score at Frith Street Gallery using systems of chance to make artistic decisions.

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Patricio Forrester with Artmongers presents Political Swing at Casa Abierta at the Argentine ambassador’s residence.

The Regent’s Canal, 21st July

The Regent’s Canal is the main route for this week’s gallery run. It offers a passage across the north of London hugging the upper curve of Regent’s Park before continuing east and then heading down to the Thames near Canary Wharf. A canal is more than just thoroughfare though, it may in some respects be considered a friend. Apart from providing great company with its spectacle of barges and locks, its own objectives of seeking out warehouses, docks and old gasworks, seem to match up to those of any intrepid gallery visitor whose primary targets lie in those very buildings that the canal was originally built to serve. Occasionally one sees a bridge overhead, though with little evidence of the main road running over its hump, and rather like a departure through a tube station, the steps up to the bridge offer access to a terrestrial world that has lain out of sight during the journey itself.

Whilst leaving the canal is easy enough, trying to arrive at it through a pleasant route can cause some difficulties. From South London, access is best gained through the green corridor of St Jame’s Park, Green Park and Hyde Park. But for perfectionists, there is no avoiding the dusty streets off Edgware Road that puncture any illusion of a green and blue thoroughfare. There is some small compromise though as an extension of the canal offers itself to those coming up from Hyde Park. Here they can enter a region called the Paddington Basin. To the first time user, this assembly of watery and grassy sections comes as a surprise as the pieces start seeking connections to each other, tessellating themselves to form a new psychic map of the city. On this map sit the galleries themselves. Lisson Gallery is reached from one of the earlier bridges, whilst further east, lies the Gagosian gallery, before Wharf Road then provides access to a further hub. Here a tributary of the canal has extended down the backs of some warehouses to Victoria Miro Gallery and Parasol space. The road runs down the front, initially enforcing a separation from the day’s travelling companion but quickly providing a reunion. This comes about because the two galleries themselves have teamed up to create a landscaped region at their rear which incorporates the canal tributary itself into a surprising sculpture patio with watery backdrop.

To reach Stuart Shave Modern Art, the canal must be left behind completely as one crosses the busy road running down from Islington. Though only five minutes away, the waterway seems to be no more than a distant memory since cars and trucks now dominate the urban space. This introduces a separate class of galleries, those that are surrounded by roads, but lie only a stone’s throw away from the core loop comprising the three parks and the canal. To this class, in fact, can be added all the Mayfair galleries lying just across Piccadilly from Green Park and the green and blue thread of which it is part. Stuart Shave’s gallery is set to the side of an attractive square with attendant church that plays host to the London Philharmonic Orchestra most lunchtimes. Enjoying not just the kudos of this location and companion building, the gallery has also gained a new-found reputation through its own merit, being the current holder of the Best Exhibitor prize from this year’s Frieze show.

Inside, Phillip Lai has displayed works made from plastic and rubber objects. A blue washing up bowl is screwed vertically to the wall and at the bottom is some dried rice whose simple crescent shape looks like a smile drawn by the deft hand of a cartoonist animating it into a face, at least to those open to such a possibility. Then on another wall the artist has displayed a large green 8×4 wooden board. The only suggestion of its origins are some light bulbs that punctuate its surface with white plastic bulb holders screwed to the board, some sitting on the surface and others appearing to protrude from underneath. The time line of this assembly is unclear and it is also unclear if it is a found object from a fair ground or has been made deliberately. The few drips of green paint that run across the holders indicate that the bulbs were an early addition to the piece predating the paint but offer no further solution to this question. With these thoughts in mind, I rejoin the canal as it moves onwards to Limehouse, and share some last moments of revery as it silently approaches the Thames.

On display too, are images below from this year’s Goldsmiths MFA fine art degree show.

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Spitfire Works on Penfold Street close to the Regents Canal. This Art Deco classic was home to a manufacturer of tyres for WW2 aircraft including the eponymous Spitfire. Palmer Tyre Company.

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Gallery Runner entered into the spirit of this Stuart Cumberland piece at The Approach Gallery. Excellent show.

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Looking out from Ben Pimlott Building of Goldsmiths College designed by Alsop and Partners. Will Alsop had previously produced a set of squiggle drawings inspired by the same location of New Cross.

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Used the Regents Canal to access all the galleries today, first Lisson Gallery, then Stuart Shave Modern Art and finally The Approach Gallery before exiting at Limehouse Basin and heading back to Peckham.

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Dan Graham’s pavilion at Lisson Gallery with some classic video pieces including CCTV of a fox locked in the national gallery (London) at night.

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Great landscape piece by Roel van Putten at Goldsmiths MFA Fine Art.

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This piece at Goldsmiths MFA Fine Art by Gui Ponde really is very good. Some strange detached head juxtaposed with government identification papers as if that might make the taxonomic process any easier!

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Gallery Runner spotted this mini gallery in the goldsmiths MA Fine Art degree show. As a past student I am familiar with the conversion of the swimming pool into art studios whilst the old poolside changing rooms are now used for storage. It appears one of these has become a shrine to BANK of MOT International. Artists of this collective included Simon Bedwell, John Russell and Milly Thompson. Here can be seen altered (improved) gallery press releases dating back to their seminal late 90’s period.

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Phillip Lai at Stuart Shave Modern Art using his customary rubber materials and juxtaposed bright colours.

Gallery run 10th June

Listened to Mary Heilman about her exhibition at the Whitechapel Gallery the day before. North over Lambeth Bridge to Rob Tufnell. Cafe, bread, meeting about cycle trip to York and on to Hollybush Gardens. Then North East to Regent’s Canal. Wilkinson Gallery, The Approach and South to Brick Lane Bagel-Bake. Opening at Kate Macgarry and back South over Tower Bridge.

231Evan Holloway at The Approach. He usually creates coloured arrays of natural forms. Here is something different.

232Ketty la Rocca at Wilkinson Gallery was a 60’s Italian artist who explored personal identity. Her beautiful black i sculptures are shown here, actually photographed through a separate mirror installation of hers.

233I saw this on Wharf Road.

234Lubaina Himid at Hollybush Gardens with decorated trolleys.

235Mary Heilmann at Whitechapel Gallery with images that are gridded yet expressionist.

236Goshka Macuga at Kate Macgarry with a wool tapestry originally shown at the Berlin Biennale 2014.

237Reto Pulfer at Hollybush Gardens with casually stitched fabrics and dyed canvas.

238Knut Henrik Henriksen at Hollybush Gardens with artwork inspired by packaging.

239Will Benedict at Rob Tufnell with work inspired by a scientist’s battle with the pesticide industry.

Gallery run 12th May

Recontextualised artefacts and modified objects from contemporary artists and spiritualism from Hilma af Klint.

191Hilma af Klint at Serpentine Galleries.

192Paulo Nimer Pjota

193Jimmy Desana at Wilkinson Gallery with a photo of the famous pop art icon at work photographing a nude shown here cropped.

194Tomma Abts at Greengrassi

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196Cyprien Gaillard at Laura Bartlett with teeth from drilling equipment shown as artefacts.

197Lisa Oppenheim at The Approach on a very sunny day today.

198Michail Pirgelis of Spruth and Magers is showing at Laura Bartlett with more aeroplane inspired artwork.

199Rob Chavasse who makes gallery holes and interconnections between rooms, from The Sunday Painter, is showing at a group show at Herald Street. The socket extends across the gallery and into the office and powers both computers and artworks.

Gallery Run 31st January

51At The Approach. The penny has dropped! Helen Appel’s #canvasdeposits are actually painted! In this show curated by Jack Lavender her work strongly portrays the theme of detritus in domestic settings.

52Synaesthesia is the subject for Daria Martin at Maureen Paley Gallery. However she is interested in a stronger type called Mirror-touch Synaesthesia. People can actually feel a touch when they see it experienced by another.

53Making my way back from the Approach. There were two cats boarding their ship at The Limehouse Basin.

Gallery Run 13th December

1a1Hello folks welcome to my very first blog as the Gallery Runner. I begin at Regent’s Canal coming out of Limehouse Basin. This is the access route to the first gallery of the day, The Approach.

1a2I was lucky to catch the last day of Sara VanDerBeek’s show before The Approach closes for Christmas.

1a3With this camera angle I find a light installation outside numbers 2 and 4 Herald Street where my next two galleries are.

1a4At Herald Street, the strip lights seemed to strobe when I took photos giving green bands. I liked the effect on Diane Simpson’s elegant assembly with its delicate lines and holes.

1a5With the title of Maze Runner, Phillip Zach’s piece (at Laura Bartlett Gallery) must feature in my inaugural blog!

1a6Cambridge Heath Road opposite AP Fitzpatrick, an art materials shop, reminds me of the pleasure of paint.