Exhibition

B L A K E

25 Jul 2019 – 29 Sep 2019

Regular hours

Monday
Closed
Tuesday
12:00 – 16:00
Wednesday
12:00 – 16:00
Thursday
12:00 – 16:00
Friday
12:00 – 18:00
Saturday
12:00 – 16:00
Sunday
12:00 – 16:00

Cost of entry

Free

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A solo print show by legendary, highly influential British artist and popular culture archaeologist Peter Blake.

About

After a near sell-out show 5 years ago in Sheffield, Pop-art pioneer Blake returns this time to ‘The Viewing Room’, a new gallery aptly located within a re-purposed 1965 department store. This new ‘show & sell’ brings together a collection of new works plus a selection of rare classic pop-art-masters. A collectors dream. 

Godfather of British Pop Art Peter Blake. His work crosses all generational divides, and inspires great respect from younger artists such as Damien Hirst, Gavin Turk, Pure Evil and Tracey Emin. Knighted in 2002, an honorary doctor of the Royal College of Art, and with his work represented in major collections throughout the world, Peter Blake truly is a grandee of British Art.

Peter Blake’s work reflects his fascination with all streams of popular culture, and the beauty to be found in everyday objects and surroundings. Many of his works feature found printed materials such as photographs, comic strips or advertising texts, combined with bold geometric patterns and the use of primary colours. The works perfectly capture the effervescent and optimistic ethos of the sixties, but are also strikingly fresh and contemporary. There is also a strain of sentimentality and nostalgia running throughout his work, with particular focus towards childhood innocence and reminiscence, as can be seen clearly in his recent Alphabet series. Blake is renowned for his connection with the music industry, having produced iconic album covers for the Beatles, Paul Weller, The Who, and Oasis.

Peter Blake was born in Dartford, Kent in 1932 and studied initially at Gravesend Technical College from 1949-51. After a period of national service in the Royal Air Force, Blake attended the Royal College of Art, graduating in 1956. Upon graduation he won the Leverhulme Research Award to study popular art, this allowed him to travel and study folk art in countries such as Belgium, France, Italy and Spain: his grand tour. It was around the period of his return to the UK that Blake’s style evolved from the classical naturalistic oil works of his early period to the collaged works containing images of movie stars, musicians and pin-up girls that we most readily associate him with (however, Blake as always retained the naturalistic strain of his work and has continued to work in oil on canvas throughout his career).

During the 1960s and 70s Blake taught at various institutions such as St. Martins School of Art, Harrow School of Art, Walthamstow School of Art and the Royal College of Art. He also exhibited his work in many individual and group shows during this period, both domestically and internationally. In 1961 Blake won the John Moores Award for his work Self Portrait with Badges, and was also featured in Ken Russell’s BBC film on Pop Art ‘Pop Goes the Easel’, which first brought him to wide popular attention. In 1969 Blake left London to live in the West country where he was a founding member of the Brotherhood of Ruralists in 1975. He continued to live near Bristol until 1979 and during this period his work moved away from the glossy commercial pop art for which he is most celebrated and focussed on literary and rural subjects in oil.

Blake moved back to Chiswick in 1979, upon his return to London his work reverted to the earlier popular culture references that had been his dominant inspiration before his rural period. He still resides and works in Chiswick, maintaining a prolific output of work. He was elected a member of the Royal Academy of Arts in 1981, and a CBE in 1983. There was a major retrospective of his work Now We Are 64, at the National Gallery in 1996, as well as at Tate Liverpool in 2007. 

Recent years have been as busy as ever: 2016 started with a solo show of original work ‘Portraits and People’ at London’s Waddington Custot Galleries, which garnered national and international press attention. Highlights in 2015  included Blake’s commission from Tate Liverpool and Liverpool Biennial to transform a Mersey ferry into a ‘dazzle ship’ to commemorate the work of First World War ship designers. The ‘dazzle ferry’ project was at the centre of a  BBC ‘What Do Artists Do All Day?’ episode focusing on Blake. Blake has designed fabrics for Stella McCartney, as well as the carpets in the new Supreme Court. In 2012 he re-designed the BRIT award statuettes and produced a portrait of the the Queen commissioned by the Radio Times to celebrate the Diamond Jubilee (which appeared on its cover). He is currently working on a series of jacket designs for Penguin books, he has also been commissioned to paint a canvas of St. Martin for the Knights Chapel in St. Paul’s Cathedral- the first new artist to be included for several hundred years.

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