White

I recently went to Edmund de Waal’s exhibition at the Royal Academy.  I am not sure what I was expecting but I but I found myself to be really rather overawed by the experience.  It was quite a small exhibition and I think that this gave it an intimacy which added to the enjoyment.

Perhaps it was the subdued lighting and the sense of history of the setting which provided such a special atmosphere.  The library has never been used for an exhibition before and so there was a feeling of having been invited into a private part of the Academy; that you were no longer just the general public.  We were the only people there for most of the time and, with a very informative and interesting security man, we toured the exhibition learning a lot about the library and feeling very privileged.

Because I don’t look very carefully at all the blurb which the RA sends me through the post, I think I had assumed that the exhibition was about de Waal more than by de Waal.  I had not expected to see such a diverse collection of work.  There was his Hare with Amber Eyes – I have only just got round to reading the book and so I was extraordinarily emotional about seeing this exquisite beauty so soon afterwards.  How wonderful that, after all this piece has seen, it has made it to such a hallowed location, even on a temporary basis.  There also were a number of de Waal’s own pieces lighting up dark corners of the library with the stunning translucence of porcelain.  But  how amazing to be invited to think about the works of composer John Cage and a pure white Meissen beaker during the same afternoon.

I am a dead ringer for collections of similar, very simple things and so I love the idea of a group of white objects.  I also go floppy at the knees when I real things such as the opening paragraph of the exhibition blurb: ‘White is an aura.  White is a staging post to look at the word from.  White is not neutral; it forces other colours to reveal themselves. It moralises – it is clean when nothing else is clean, it is light when most things are heavy.  It is political. It is enmeshed in the world’.  Yes, it is!

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De Waal is known for his installations of beautiful white vessels

Happy New Year!

Life has been somewhat difficult over the past week and I just couldn’t get my blog out.  Actually I felt very bereft as I didn’t manage to get to the studio either and I kept yearning for the feel of clay.  However, I thought I would share my New Year’s resolution with you since it has already proved extremely provident.  The trouble is that my studio is so small and the pressure for space is so tight that I am always moving stuff around to try and get it all on a shelf somewhere.  Then when I get back to it, especially after a break such as the last week, I have to spend ages remembering what I was up to.  I just hope that I remember to keep this up.

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Whenever I work in the studio I am going to remember to do a quick sketch of how I have left my shelves.  This should hopefully mean fewer levels of confusion about what stage everything is at.