Tag: Leyden Gallery

  • Drawing inspiration: Biro art takes centre stage at With/Draw exhibition

    Drawing inspiration: Biro art takes centre stage at With/Draw exhibition

    Biro drawing cropped Sarah Muirhead drawing
    Biro drawing by Sarah Muirhead

    Scottish painter and draughtsman Sarah Muirhead will be returning to East London this month to spearhead a group exhibition that focuses on drawing.

    With/Draw at Leyden Gallery takes drawing as the quintessential starting point from which ideas develop into larger or more complex work.

    The artists participating in the exhibition all use drawing in diverse ways, from the immediacy of life-drawing to detailed preparatory studies.

    Christine Taylor Patten’s drawings evolve from a single dot in a space, whilst collages by Victoria Coster attempt to anthropomorphise the sound of tinnitus in the ears, giving form to the formless.

    The city is the main source of inspiration for artists Marc Gooderham and Nicholas Borden, who draw using pastel, chalk or pencil. Life drawing group Nude for Thought will also be displaying a selection of its work, which explores the male form.

    Sarah Muirhead, whose solo show at Leyden Gallery last year revealed the artist’s own fascination with the physicality and spirit of the body – it’s potential for pain as well as pleasure – will be displaying a selection of anatomical biro drawings.

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    “Drawing is honest and intuitive and, for me, the most intimate way of recording or examining a subject,” explains the 29-year-old artist.

    “It lays bare your most fundamental skills as an artist. I think that paintings are transformative and take you somewhere new but drawing shows you the identity and, to some extent, the neuroticism and thought process of the creator.”

    “It’s fascinating that people doodle to relieve stress, record and recover from trauma and explain tactical ideas and scientific theory by drawing. There’s something integral in the way we think and the fact that we make these marks.”

    With/Draw, 6–16 July, Leyden Gallery, Leyden Street, E1 7LE
    leydengallery.com

    Biro drawing – Sarah Muirhead 620
    Biro drawing by Sarah Muirhead
    Biro drawing with pen
    Biro drawing by Sarah Muirhead
  • Re-Defining Beauty at Leyden Gallery: taking a fresh look at the naked male form

    Nude for Thought artists (l-r) Martin Ireland, Neil Groom and Richard Dickson
    Painting by Nude for Thought artists (l-r): Martin Ireland, Neil Groom and Richard Dickson

    What is wrong with the naked male form? From Monty Python’s The Life of Brian to The Full Monty, men’s rude bits continue to be exploited for comedic value, their innate beauty hushed up and kept firmly behind closed doors.

    But a group of male artists seeks to change all that, by holding an exhibition that reconsiders the raw form of the naked male body and reestablishes the tradition of the male nude as an object of beauty and bearer of meaning.

    Re-Defining Beauty, which opens at the Leyden Gallery this month, provides a contemporary take on traditional art historical portrayals of the male nude form.

    Inspired by the British Museum exhibition Defining Beauty, which looked at the origins of representing the human body in art, the week-long show features a range of mixed media art works that question terms such as ‘beautiful’, ‘powerful’, and ‘masculine’ in relation to the male form.

    Nude by Brian Dennis
    Nude by Brian Dennis

    Artist Martin Ireland founded Nude for Thought after becoming frustrated at the tendency for life drawing groups to use mainly female models.

    In 2004 Ireland created a life-drawing group that used male models exclusively.

    As the popularity of the life drawing sessions increased, discussions arose about the relevance of the male nude in 21st century art.

    Many of the artists had experienced difficulty in exhibiting male nudes in commercial galleries, or were rejected when entering paintings of the male body in open competitions.

    It was from those discussions that Nude for Thought was formed. The group, which brings together painting, drawing, sculpture and performance art, held its first exhibition in Southwark last November.

    “Is there a place for the male form in contemporary decorative art,” a statement on the group’s website reads. “And if so, who will look at it through fresh eyes?”

    Nude for Thought is at Leyden Gallery, Leyden Street, E1 7LE from 3–7 November.
    leydengallery.com

  • Sarah Muirhead gets physical at Leyden gallery with Bonded exhibition

    Self-restraint by Sarah Muirhead. Copyright Sarah Muirhead
    Self-restraint by Sarah Muirhead. Copyright Sarah Muirhead

    The body is the focus of emerging artist Sarah Muirhead’s relaunch show at Leyden Gallery this month.

    Entitled Bonded, the exhibition focuses on the artist’s fascination with the physicality of the body and its capacity for pleasure, pain and expression.

    Dancers, acrobats and tattooed torsos are among Muirhead’s subjects; characters in provocative poses who seem to have lived their lives on the fringes of the mainstream.

    The detail in Muirhead’s work verges on photographic realism, though with a colour palette more akin to German expressionism.
    Bonded will be the Edinburgh-based artist’s first large-scale show following a two-year hiatus from the art scene.

    After graduating from the Edinburgh School of Art in 2009, Muirhead was tipped for great things, and for her ‘re-launch’ show, the Leyden Gallery will be showing her figurative art work alongside a lithographic print by the internationally renowned Portuguese artist Paula Rego, as well as five works on paper by the Argentine surrealist painter Leonor Fini.

    Bonded: Sarah Muirhead + Paula Rego & Leonor Fini is at Leyden Gallery, 9/9a Leyden Street,E1 7LE until 27 June
    leydengallery.com

    The Performer's Apparition by Sarah Muirhead. Copyright Sarah Muirhead
    The Performer’s Apparition by Sarah Muirhead. Copyright Sarah Muirhead
    Entanglement by Sarah Muirhead. Copyright Sarah Muirhead
    Entanglement by Sarah Muirhead. Copyright Sarah Muirhead