Had a look at a lone swan as we crossed the bridge to the Western park, where we had a long walk. I didn't take any photographs as it was so cold I could not bear to take my gloves off
A Place Called Space
Sunday, 21 December 2025
Charlecote Park - snapshots
Had a look at a lone swan as we crossed the bridge to the Western park, where we had a long walk. I didn't take any photographs as it was so cold I could not bear to take my gloves off
Thursday, 18 December 2025
Kiefer/Van Gogh - the drawings
A wonderful and thought-provoking exhibition, featuring two of my favourite artists. An exhibition of a selection of paintings and drawings by Van Gogh together with early sketches by Kiefer, as well as canvases that he painted in 2019 while reflecting on his artistic forebear. Alongside these works others were featured that testify to his continuing influence.
Anselm Kiefer, Dr Dumont, 1st President of the Bullfighters in Fourques, 1963, (charcoal, ink and graphite on paper)
Anselm Kiefer, Untitled, 1963, (graphite and ballpoint pen on paper)
Anselm Kiefer, Untitled, 1963, (graphite and ballpoint pen on paper)
Anselm Kiefer, Untitled, 1963, (graphite on paper)
Vincent Van Gogh, Avenue of Poplars, 1884, (pencil, penk and ink on paper)
Vincent Van Gogh, Country Road, 1882, (pencil, pen and brush and ink, watercolour on paper)
Van Gogh used the reed screens shielding the market gardens from the wind and drifting sand to reinforce its strong linear perspective. The landscape's otherworldly light, the naked trees, two lone figures - one working in the garden, the other walking down the road - and a single bird in the sky imbue this work with a sense of melancholy.
Vincent Van Gogh, Landscape with Figures Pushing Wheelbarrows, 1890, (pencil on paper)
Van Gogh, La Crau Seen from Montmajour, 1888, (pencil, pen and reed pen and ink on paper)
Thursday, 11 December 2025
Kiefer / Van Gogh
Kiefer/Van Gogh: Poets and Lovers, at the Royal Academy of Arts.
looking closer
looking closer
Anselm Kiefer, Nevermore, 2014, (emulsion, oil, acrylic, shellac, gold leaf and sediment of electrolysis on canvas)
Vincent Van Gogh, Sunflowers Gone to Seed, 1887, (oil on cotton)
Vincent Van Gogh, Poppy Field, 1890, (oil on canvas)
Vincent Van Gogh, Snow-covered Field with a Harrow (after Millet), 1890, (oil on canvas)
While in the hospital at Saint-Remy, Van Gogh painted 21 copies, or rather translations, after works by Jean-Francois Millet, an artist known for his depictions of the toil of peasant farmers. Although working from a black and white print of Winter, the Plain of Chailly, Van Gogh re-imagined it in this version as a study in icy blues and greens, conveying a powerful sense of mood.
looking closer
looking closer
Vincent Van Gogh, Shoes, 1856, (oil on canvas)
This painting of well-worn shoes is, for Kiefer, a portrait of sorts in their owner's absence, a relic of journeys past and at the same time a symbol of what is to come. It reminds him of the essay The Origin of the Work of Art, by Martin Heidegger, who, Kiefer recalls, 'writes about the struggle between the world created by the artist and the earth, which closes itself off'.

























































