Monday, 27 April 2026

Moco Museum, Barcelona





Moco Museum, Barcelona.







Seen as Barcelona's trendiest Museum, the Moco features contemporary art, street art, immersive installations  and photography. It opened in 2021. This is just a very small selection of what was on offer.




Miranda Makaroff, Belle Jin Shuan, 2023, (hand-made cotton and wool rug)





Keith Haring, Sans Titre, 1982, (red tarp)




Keith Haring, Dog & Snamke Human Large, 1980, (white chalk on black paper)

A confrontation: serpent-headed figures with mouths open and forked tongues face off against barking dogs, which roar back in defiance. This symbol-charged battleground evokes both ancient myths and modern fears: the snakes recall classical iconography, embodying the dual forces of healing and harm, wisdom and danger, while suggesting the unpredictability of life and death. The dogs, recurring figures throughout Haring's compositions, act as agents of protest, barking against authority and political control. 

Here, Haring represents conflict through visual symbols adapted from ancient mythology and the urban language of 1980s street culture, all reinterpreted to reflect the tensions of his own time, from social inequality to the uncertainty of the late Cold War period.

This work is part of Haring's Subway Drawings, executed deep down in the subway tunnels of New York City, drawings made with a single, bold uninterrupted line. These Subway Drawings record the artist's flow and quick way of working. Now, they are considered to be his purest creations. Although these drawings only ever remained in place for two days to two weeks, it was important for Haring to connect with his audience during the morning commute. Advertising space in the metro was limited and always changing. These authentic works have rarely survived, but this one has.




Hayden Kays, Fact, 2021, (acrylic on canvas)



Jeremy and Sian Walking, 2010, (continuous computer animation)




Takashi Murakami, Pink River, (acrylic on canvas)

When Murakami invented the term Superflat in 2001, he launched on of postmodern art's most exciting and refreshing art movements. Influenced by the Post WWII manga and anime craze, Superflat' references both the two-dimensional quality of traditional Japanese painting and the shallow qualities of consumer culture. As much as this piece appears super-flat, the artist lays out a visual explosion where supreme god-like animals rule and feast on wild colour.




Damien Hirst, Politeness, 2021,  (laminated giclee print on aluminium)

This work is part of Hirst's The Virtues series, inspired by the Eight Virtues of Bushido, the ethical code of the samurai based on principles such as justice, mercy and loyalty, among others. Politeness, one of these virtues, is here translated into visual form. 







Robin Kid (a.k.a. The Kid), Destroy me, 2019, (oil and egg tempera on canvas)

Drawing from the world of advertising, the Internet, television and imagery from the past and present, these works question our polarised world of the 21st century and the thin frontier between innocence and corruption confronting today's youth.




Salvador Dali, Marilyn Monroe, 1972, (flexiglass, oil, nylon thread, metal on wood)

Dali reinterprets Marilyn Monroe into a composition of visual distortions, creating a dialogue berween celebrity,  perception, and the materiality of art. In the 1970s, he experimented with new media and sculptural techniques, seeking ways to expand visual possibilities and challenge traditional portraiture.

In this work Dali blends Surrealist language with the formal experimentation that defined his later career. By fracturing Monroe's features, including her  lips and eyes, into a series of flating forms and magnified contours, he reduces her to her most emblematic traits, reflecting society's tendency to focus on surface appearances while overlooking the complexity of the individual. Does this image reveal Monroe herself, or just the projection of her image that the world sees?




Yayoi Kusama, Pumpkin (White), 1992, (screeprint)




Kaws, Watching, 2022, (cast silicon bronze and acrylic polyurethane sign paint)




Kaws, Man's Best Friend Sofa






Saturday, 25 April 2026

The Bank of Greece's Art Collection - 3



60 Years of the National Bank of Greece Cultural Foundation, Some of the art in their collection 




The bank's collection comprises more than 7,000 works of painting, printmaking, sculpture, drawings, illustrated books, tapestries, mosaics and ceramics. A fraction of it is displayed at the Benaki Museum. It spans the whole of the 20th century, giving us an overview of how Greek art developed in that period.

This is the third and final post on this exhibition. If you want to see the other two posts you can go here and here



Andreas Vourloumis, Seated Young Man, 1959, (oil on canvas)



Mentis Bostantzoglou, Erotokritos and Aretousa, 1970-79, (oil on canvas)



Giorgos Ioannou, Third Class Carriage, 1969, (oil on canvas)




Nelly Andrikopoulou, Portrait of Nata Mela, 1948-49, (ink and watercolour on paper)



Nelly Andrikopoulou, Natalia Mela painting in Spetses, 1985, (tempera on paper)



Asadour Baharian, The Linotype Setter, 1963, (oil on canvas)



Gerasimos Steris, Composition with Sea, 1930-39, (oil on canvas)



Yannis Pappas, Portrait of a Child, 1953, (tempera on paper)



Polykleitos Rengos, The Model, 1955, (mixed media on canvas)



Nikos Nikolaou, Nude Figure, 1963, (oil on canvas)



Lefteris Rorros, Composition, 1960-69, (oil on canvas)




 Stefanos Daskalakis, Portrait, 1984, (oil on canvas)




Fotis Kontoglou, Portrait of my Brother, 1938, (oil on canvas)




Edouard Sacaillan, Evoking the Spirits of my Parents, 1983, (oil on canvas)




Cleopatra Dinga, Man on the Tracks, 2007, (charcoal and gouache on paper)




Panayiotis Tetsis, Objects, 1970-79, (oil on canvas)




Dimitris Mytaras, Composition with Sunglasses, 1970, (acrylic on canvas)




Yannis Gaitis, Fira, Santorini, 1953, (oil on canvas)




Eleni Vernadaki, Form, 1973, (ceramic)




Thursday, 23 April 2026

The first bluebells - 2026


The bluebells in our garden have been in full bloom for a few days now, and even though the garden variety seem to flower much earlier than the wild ones, we thought we would go and have a look at the wild ones. For our first trip (there will be quite a few, as we both love bluebells) we decided to go to the woods that start just outside Leamington and lead to Leek Wootton.


Almost immediately we saw some


Wanting to have them all around us,  we took this narrow path on our left


a large area full of them, all around us


I post about bluebells every year and every time I am disappointed by the quality of the photographs - the vivid blue, the vibrancy never comes out, it's such a disappointment









We got to the end of the path, fields in front of us


so we retraced our steps





as you can see, they are not fully out yet




We joined the main path again


Not many people about, we must have seen two people for the whole walk - it was just us and the birds




Another area with bluebells




more flowers amongst the bluebells




Again, another path leading to an area full of bluebells, so we took it










I love walking through woods, but in bluebell season I forget to look up







We did not walk all the way to Leek Wooton. I was recovering from a cold, and this was my first walk so wanted to take it easy so we retraced our steps




got to the end of the walk, which was also our beginning, through the gate




on the narrow path next to the field.




Walked on the road for less than two minutes




View from the bridge




and from the other side





zooming in - I wish I could see this house properly, it always intrigues me. As you can see in the photograph it's on two sets of stills. And those windows - I love them.




After the bridge, this wooded area, that has some very interesting buildings




Approaching the mill, the main building in the area




but before that, the entrance to the house I saw from the bridge - that's all one can see




plus, this. I wish I could see more




and now, the mill. 




I love this building - this was probably a loader







the balcony




the window. And what's the bit below, a small inner balcony?




the wheel




the steps going up





the side of the mill








A view of the mill from the other side - I love that chimney




The Mill House across the road. We'll have to come back when the wisteria is in full bloom




We then walked back to our car and headed for home. I love this little green oasis which is only a 10-minute drive from the centre of Leamington.