The annual Goldsmiths MA show is the first stop on today’s run. Spread across the old swimming baths and the stunning Ben Pimlott building with views across London, the show has a variety of interesting architectural back drops. These are matched in no small part by a great painting from Daniel Arcand displayed on the top floor of the Ben Pimlott building. The artwork has a Manga-like quality to it with excellent mark-making and a great economy of design.
From here, the quickest route to Victoria Park is through the Greenwich foot tunnel and then north along the Regent’s canal. The Approach Gallery is showing a retrospective of its artists as well as previous exhibitions spanning twenty years. Works by Rezi Van Lankveld and Gary Webb stand out in the group show, whilst in a side room there is a film of speeded-up highlights from the previous shows here from which I recognise in their younger years some of my former Goldsmiths colleagues.
Then after a stop at Wilkinson Gallery with some evocative work by the late Derek Jarman, Herald Street plays host to the next three shows. At Maureen Paley there are abstract sculptures depicting cubic volumes of mainly empty space, adorned with a few intriguing objects including books and carpet tiles. Tom Burr is a thought provoking artist and writer who is new to this gallery having transferred from Stuart Shave Modern Art. A few doors down at Laura Bartlett, a group show has lovely small pieces by Koak who depicts female figures in slightly unusual ways. The images seem to fulfil their remit of challenging the viewer’s gaze by showing the figures engaging only with each other and without any additional acknowledgement of the viewer.
At Herald Street Gallery there is a great installation by Klaus Weber. The gallery assistant warns me of the hazards of a temporary rickety floor and protruding cactuses. The planks spring up slightly across the joists, whilst the cactuses penetrate these planks through round holes. Meanwhile a policeman-figure is kneeling down, with head below floor level accessed through yet another circular hole. There is also a stack of coloured glass spheres raised up on a plinth that, we are told, represent a type of humanoid figure. This perhaps needs more explanation and comes from a story told in Plato’s symposium. Essentially these figures were described by the Greek philosopher as mythological beings that Zeus callously cut into two halves, bisecting them from top to bottom. As these half-beings entered into ancient history they then matched up to the anthropomorphic form we currently reside in. The truth of this myth seems to lie in its ability to articulate our constant psychological need to find our other missing halves.
After a quick lunch at Bagel bake, which seems to have had a cash injection as there is now a new air conditioning system and workmen replacing tiles, I stroll down to Kate MacGarry Gallery finishing off a last few bits of apple strudel. Inside there are works by four artists including Francis Uprichard. She has presented two gothic figures that resemble harlequins. They are smaller than life size, but have a powerful presence due partly to their positioning on plinths but also because of their excellently rendered faces imparting, not for the first time today, a challenge to the gaze of the viewer. With that now recorded and the Hackney galleries fully explored, there just remains a return back South to complete this week’s run.

Daniel Arcand at Goldsmiths MA Degree Show with a great fluent painting with drawn outlines.

Rezi Van Lankveld of The Approach with a lovely loosely rendered painting.

Gary Webb of The Approach with a colourful resin-based wall sculpture.

Derek Jarman of Wilkinson Gallery with a series of black paintings incorporating objects.

Gretchen Bender at Wilkinson Gallery with works that explore how images are propagated through our media.

Tom Burr of Maureen Paley.

Koak at Laura Bartlett Gallery with figurative paintings that have a strong drawing quality to them.

Klaus Weber of Herald Street with sculptures that depict a mythical human form made from globes that Plato had written about.

Francis Upritchard of Kate Macgarry Gallery with gothic figures.




































Evan Holloway at The Approach. He usually creates coloured arrays of natural forms. Here is something different.
Ketty 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.
I saw this on Wharf Road.
Lubaina Himid at Hollybush Gardens with decorated trolleys.
Mary Heilmann at Whitechapel Gallery with images that are gridded yet expressionist.
Goshka Macuga at Kate Macgarry with a wool tapestry originally shown at the Berlin Biennale 2014.
Reto Pulfer at Hollybush Gardens with casually stitched fabrics and dyed canvas.
Knut Henrik Henriksen at Hollybush Gardens with artwork inspired by packaging.
Will Benedict at Rob Tufnell with work inspired by a scientist’s battle with the pesticide industry.
Georg Baselitz at White Cube. These studies of the artist and wife in watercolour are great.
Blair Thurman at Almine Rech Gallery. Loved the unfinished paint of this otherwise immaculate sculpture-painting. Photographed in April.
Chantal Joffe at Victoria Miro. Loved this painting photographed in March.
Sterling Ruby at Spruth and Magers with art to wear. Loved the colours of this work photographed in May.
Jules de Balincourt at Victoria Miro. Beautiful colour and the light is almost tangible. A favourite photo from the archive.
Nam June Paik at Tate Modern. A favourite photo I took on a gallery run in April.
Matt Copson at Wilkinson Gallery. Great expletive-punctuated monologue from Reynard the Fox. But done with shrewdness by the artist.
Adam Buick at Corvi Mora in February. A favourite photo I hadn’t posted at the time. A solar system of pots.
Hilma af Klint at Serpentine Galleries.
Paulo Nimer Pjota
Jimmy Desana at Wilkinson Gallery with a photo of the famous pop art icon at work photographing a nude shown here cropped.
Tomma Abts at Greengrassi
Cyprien Gaillard at Laura Bartlett with teeth from drilling equipment shown as artefacts.
Lisa Oppenheim at The Approach on a very sunny day today.
Michail Pirgelis of Spruth and Magers is showing at Laura Bartlett with more aeroplane inspired artwork.
Rob 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.
Turville Street near Brick Lane has these openly exposed gas meters that are an ever-changing prop in various works of street art.
Renee So at Kate MacGarry. The smoke plume mirrors the Assyrian beard in this tapestry. The figure is boot-like as a recurring motif.
Paul P at Maureen Paley.
Signed in at Laura Bartlett this morning about 12.25! This artefact is in the gallery itself.
Becky Beasley at Laura Bartlett. The drawer artwork is being fixed by her partner about whom the show is partly based.
Philipp Timischl at Vilma Gold. Good show.
Juliette Boneviot in The Green Ray at Wilkinson Gallery, which is also her gallery. The show is based on a rare 5 second (or so) phenomenon whereby the red setting sun appears green due to a sudden change in …. something!
A door on Vyner Street near Wilkinson Gallery.
Anna Barriball of Frith Street Gallery in The Green Ray, a show at Wilkinson Gallery. Thickly layered graphite on paper looks like a leaded sunday window.