Exhibition

Peter Blake: An Alphabet

23 Nov 2007 – 5 Jan 2008

Event times

Wednesday ' Saturday 10am ' 6pm

Cost of entry

Free

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Paul Stolper

London, United Kingdom

Address

Travel Information

  • Old Street
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About

Peter Blake's 'Alphabet' is both a tour de force of printmaking and a summation of so many of his artistic concerns. Thematically, the alphabet allows Peter to indulge in his passion for collecting letters and imagery, and yet the finite limits set by an A to Z are quite rigourous and restraining. There is a limitation to working with the alphabet that is not present when working on a canvas where the possibilities are endless; with the alphabet words, objects, and pictures have their place and it becomes a happy antidote to painting. As Peter says "I suppose I love lists. I love songs with lists, like 'These Foolish Things', which has a whole series of lists. And I love things that have a beginning and a very specific ending." Peter's fascination with and stimulation by letters, font and typography was already established by the time he had completed a year of a National Diploma in Graphic Design, just prior to going to the Royal College in 1953.

There is also a beautiful childlike quality to 'An Alphabet' that has its roots in Peter's childhood, which was disrupted by the Second World War when he was evacuated two times, for the first time on the day after war broke out, with the result that "that key age of childhood from seven to fourteen was disrupted". This is not to say the work is childlike but about childhood, or as Mel Gooding writes that has a "knowing innocence" and is "an evocation of a paradise lost".

'An Alphabet' is made up of 26 silkscreen prints, each signed and numbered by the artist, in an edition of 60 with 5 artist proofs. 10 sets of the prints available individually, the rest as portfolios presented in a buckram covered archive box. The screenprints were proofed and editioned in London by Coriander Studio and are printed on 300gsm Velin Arches paper

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