Thursday, January 31, 2008

Art in Liverpool podcast


Thursday 31 January 08

DefNet Media have recently teamed up with Ian Jackson to start the Art in Liverpool podcast, providing a relentlessly enthusiastic look at the Liverpool visual arts scene. The latest show features "Out of Body at the Open Eye Gallery, Ian Meets the new Culture Secretary, Andy Burnham MP, ArtFinder Gallery... Ben Johnson... FACT PV, Tate PV... and the opening of the Arthur Dooley archive at the Liverpool Academy of Arts featuring Bryan Burgess and Carl Hodgeson".  

Ben Johnson poses in front of a canvas at the Pier Head for a cameramanBen Johnson press call, October 2005
In a bonus this week, they've also released a recording of an interview with Ben Johnson at the Walker Art Gallery on Monday. Ben and Ian begin by discussing a 2005 press call (photograph above) and look at the development of the painting over the period since.

Posted by Billy | 31/01/2008 10:54   | Comments [0]

 Monday, January 28, 2008

50 years of the lego brick


Monday 28 January 08

I've just noticed from the Google homepage that they are celebrating 50 years of the lego brick today. A great excuse to look again at 2005's Walker Art Gallery installation by the Little Artists, Art Craziest Nation, which has consistently remained one of the most popular features on our site for the last couple of years.

A suited lego man stands before a lego shark in a lego fishtankDamien Hirst's 'The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living'

Posted by Billy | 28/01/2008 16:04   | Comments [0]

Peter Doig, 'Blotter' and the John Moores prize


Monday 28 January 08

Painting of a winter scene showing a male figure in blue coat standing alone on a frozen lake.Image copyright of the artist

Ahead of the comprehensive Peter Doig exhibition at Tate Britain  (5 February - 27 April 2008), yesterday's Observer carried a great interview by Tim Adams with the artist.

When his 'White Canoe' sold for £5.7m last year it became the most expensive work ever sold by a European living artist, but his first big break was winning our John Moores prize in 1993 with 'Blotter'.

Doig discusses 'Blotter' in Saturday's interview, including an interesting explanation of the painting's title. The deadline to register for this September's John Moores 25 is 15 February 2008.


Posted by Billy | 28/01/2008 14:31   | Comments [0]

Posted in: walker art gallery

 Friday, July 13, 2007

Bill Viola's 'Observance' returns


Friday 13 July 07

'Observance', our video installation by Bill Viola, is back on display in the Walker Art Gallery. It was last seen in April 2005 shortly after it was purchased with assistance from the National Art Collections Fund in 2004.

Bill Viola's 'Observance''Observance' in Room One of the Walker Art Gallery

Rather than taking its place amongst contemporary items from the collection, curators have placed the work in Room One alongside works such as Ercole de' Roberti's 'Pietà' and 'The Lamentation over the Dead Christ'. These are the sort of works that inspired by Viola to make his series 'The Passions'.


Posted by Billy | 13/07/2007 16:22   | Comments [0]

Posted in: walker art gallery

 Thursday, June 14, 2007

Mark McNulty's blog


Thursday 14 June 07

I noticed on Liverpool Blogs this morning that Mark McNulty now has his own blog.

Image from Street Life

Mark was one of the two photographers featured in our Street Life exhibition at the National Conservation Centre last year. His blog promises to 'include news, recent photographs, published work and selections from the archive'.


Posted by Billy | 14/06/2007 17:37   | Comments [0]

 Wednesday, June 13, 2007

William Holman Hunt's 'The Tuscan Girl'


Wednesday 13 June 07

'The Tuscan Girl', William Holman Hunt
This afternoon's picture of the month talk at Lady Lever Art Gallery saw Sandra Penketh discussing William Holman Hunt's 'The Tuscan Girl', now available to download (mp3/transcript/links).

The painting is in a private collection and is currently on a long term loan to the Lady Lever Art Gallery. In her talk Sandra looks at Holman Hunt's early years, the formation of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, his time in Italy and his aptitude for painting portraits of children.


Posted by Billy | 13/06/2007 18:14   | Comments [0]

 Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Julian Treuherz on 'The Last Muster'


Tuesday 13 March 07

Julian Treuherz's last speaking engagement before his retirement was delivering a picture of the month talk at the Lady Lever Art Gallery on Hubert von Herkomer's 'The Last Muster'. The talk is now available to download online (mp3/transcript/links).

The painting portrays a group of Chelsea Pensioners in chapel. One of the men has  died during the service. The talk covers Herkomer's time working on 'The Graphic', Van Gogh's admiration for his work and the subject of death in Victorian painting.

Posted by Billy | 13/03/2007 15:25   | Comments [0]

 Thursday, March 08, 2007

Thank You Art Day 2007 in Liverpool


Thursday 08 March 07

Gary Sollars in front of his painting in John Moores 24Gary Sollars in front of his entry in John Moores 24
Germany-based Japanese artist Yoshiaki Kaihatsu began 39 Art Day in 2000 to increase appreciation of contemporary art in Japan. The name has something to do with 39 rhyming with 'thank you' in Japanese.  Tomorrow, Friday 9 March 2007, is 39 Art Day and this year Art in Liverpool have organised a series of offers and events in conjunction with independent artists and galleries in Liverpool.

The extensive listings include free origami cranes at the Artfinder gallery and free sake whilst viewing art at Sapporo Teppanyaki. We don't have access to instant messenging at work, but anyone with a webcam and an MSN Messenger account might be interested in web cam performance art from Transvoyeur (1-4pm). Amongst the artists performing will be Gary Sollars, whose painting 'When I Grow Up I Want To Go In There' was in last year's John Moores 24.



Posted by Billy | 08/03/2007 17:59   | Comments [0]

 Monday, February 19, 2007

Chinese New Year 2007 archived online


Monday 19 February 07

Some Sundays, even living within ten minutes of your intended destination doesn't get you there for midday, especially if there's going to be loads of firecrackers and banging drums. Yesterday I wanted to photograph the Chinese New Year celebrations on Berry Street but didn't quite make it in time. Thanks to Lizinha, Pete Carr, Peter, Indigo Goat, Spectral Shift and ijob, I don't feel that I missed out.

Tim Brunsden at Liverpool Stories produced an excellent video of the events, while Art in Liverpool blogged about them.


Posted by Billy | 19/02/2007 13:31   | Comments [0]

23 v 08


Monday 19 February 07

Mersey Bar Pilot Boat

We spent last Friday trying to kick some life into our 'Figures of 08' project. We put the project live in December but didn't have the time to give it a proper publicity push. Marc wrote about 'Figures of 08' previously, it's a capital of culture themed project that asks you to send us photographs of unintentional '08's that you come across. There's a slideshow and a google map of the photographs submitted so far.

Discussing how to kickstart our project, Marc showed me a trailer for the new Jim Carrey film 'The Number 23' on Friday. The film seems to be about a man who sees negative patterns in his life that always point to the number 23. I spent a pretty fruitless afternoon on Saturday looking for new '08's, it was annoying to walk out of the Maritime Museum and be confronted with what I now presume to be our nemesis number adorning the side of the pilot boat docked alongside.


Posted by Billy | 19/02/2007 09:02   | Comments [0]

 Thursday, January 25, 2007

Cape Farewell sets sail


Thursday 25 January 07

If you're heading over to the Walker Art Gallery this weekend for the opening days of The cathedral that never was and Doves and Dreams, you might also call in at the Conservation Centre for the final weekend of the Cape Farewell exhibition.

The exhibition looking at art and climate change finishes this Sunday, 28 January 2007.



Posted by Billy | 25/01/2007 17:56   | Comments [0]

 Wednesday, January 24, 2007

'The Decameron' and 'The Enchanted Garden'


Wednesday 24 January 07

'The Enchanted Garden', John William Waterhouse'The Enchanted Garden', John William Waterhouse

At the second attempt, I managed to record Sandra Penketh's picture of the month talk yesterday at the Lady Lever Art Gallery on John William Waterhouse's 'The Decameron' and 'The Enchanted Garden' (mp3/transcript/links).

The paintings are companion pieces, 'The Enchanted Garden' depicting a scene from Boccaccio's Decameron. Sandra's talk looks at the contemporary influences on Waterhouse, the story of the Enchanted Garden and Lord Lever's unusual approach to buying from Waterhouse's widow.

Fans of Cute Overload! shouldn't miss this photo buried in the podcast's suggested links (although whether 'mouse about to be savaged by cat' counts as cute is debatable).

The object of the month talk at 1pm in the Walker tomorrow (Thursday 25 January 2007) is on a Vivienne Westwood outfit from her Buffalo Girls collection.


Posted by Billy | 24/01/2007 17:06   | Comments [0]

 Thursday, January 18, 2007

Eighties Liverpool and bad hair days


Thursday 18 January 07

It would be wrong to highlight eighties photos of Liverpool on Flickr without pointing everyone to Nancy023's superb collection. Now based in Seattle, most of these photographs were taken during a year spent in Liverpool over twenty years ago.

Milk Bar, New Brighton</a><a href=Milk Bar, New Brighton

The whole collection is a fascinating snapshot of the era, but highlights for me include photos of Peter Hooton and The Farm, the Milk Bar in New Brighton, the Anglican Cathedral in the snow, Echo and the Bunnymen, The Smiths, a 'Sack Thatcher' poster in front of lace curtains and an 80s hair day.


Posted by Billy | 18/01/2007 13:48   | Comments [0]

Posted in: internet

Wellington and the last night of Woolton Cinema


Thursday 18 January 07

Wellington Column, Philip G MayerCommutation Row, Philip G Mayer

Philip G Mayer's flickr photostream contains some great early 1980s photographs of Liverpool, including this one of Wellington column outside the Walker with the row of buildings that were demolished to make way for Commutation Plaza.

Philip has also set up the Old Liverpool pool, inviting anyone with a Flickr account to post their photos to it. The pool includes this great set of postcards that he dates to around 1906 -  I love the Prince's Avenue and Bold Street ones. The postcards are all based on original photographs. There's also a very stylish artist's impression of the interior of the Mersey Tunnel and a set of photos of the last night of Woolton Cinema.


Posted by Billy | 18/01/2007 12:54   | Comments [0]

Posted in: internet

 Tuesday, January 16, 2007

Patrick Caulfield at the Walker and Tate Liverpool


Tuesday 16 January 07

'Still Life: Autumn Fashion'

Patrick Caulfield's 'Still Life: Autumn Fashion' is one of the most popular pieces in the Walker's 20th century collection and is currently on display in Room 13 at the gallery.

The excellent Patrick Caulfield collection display at Tate Liverpool (not one of our venues) finishes early next month (4 February 2007), images of all fifty two works are available on the Tate website.

To mark the end of the display, Marco Livingstone will be giving a talk in the display space next Wednesday (full details). In 1981 Marco Livingstone selected works for the Walker Art Gallery's Patrick Caulfield retrospective.


Posted by Billy | 16/01/2007 18:06   | Comments [0]

Not one of our venues


Tuesday 16 January 07

We take it for granted sometimes that everyone understands which venues we represent at National Museums Liverpool, but personal experience suggests it can be confusing. It's even more confusing when we occasionally highlight events and exhibitions at other Liverpool museums and galleries on this blog.

I'm creating this post so that when I mention a Merseyside gallery or museum, I can include a link to this explanation.

We are - Walker Art Gallery, World Museum Liverpool, Museum of Liverpool, Merseyside Maritime Museum, International Slavery Museum, Sudley House, Lady Lever Art Gallery, HM Customs & Excise National Museum and National Conservation Centre.

We're not (but we like) - Tate Liverpool, FACT, the Beatles Story, Open Eye Gallery, University of Liverpool Art Gallery, Greenland Street, View Two Gallery, Almiro Gallery, 52 Roscoe Street, Williamson Art Gallery and Museum, Birkenhead Priory, Wirral Museum, Renew Rooms, Alima Centre gallery, National Wildflower Centre, 59 Rodney Street, British Lawnmower Museum, Western Approaches, Spaceport, Bluecoat Arts Centre, Atkinson Art Gallery, Blue Planet Aquarium, South Bohemia Art Gallery, Ellesmere Port Boat Museum, World of Glass, EggSpace, Mendips, The Artfinder's Gallery, Arena, Dot-art Gallery, Cornerstone Gallery, Cube Noir, Museum Man, Liverpool Academy of Arts, The Royal Standard, Williamson Tunnels.

Hope I've not left too many off the list (and we'll look at Prescot Museum another day..).


Posted by Billy | 16/01/2007 17:48   | Comments [0]

Posted in: other museums

 Monday, January 15, 2007

Annual meteor shower chart


Monday 15 January 07

What is the parent comet of the Lyrids? Are the Andromadids extinct yet? What's the hourly rate of the Delta Aquarids? Do the Taurids end before the Leonids begin? If any of these questions have been troubling you the answers are now at hand with our new annual meteor shower chart from the staff at the Planetarium.


Posted by Billy | 15/01/2007 18:02   | Comments [0]

Liverpool Arts and Culture Forum


Monday 15 January 07

Liverpool's best art blog Art in Liverpool just got better with the creation of the Liverpool Arts and Culture forum. Register to join the discussions, post event announcements, classifieds, job vacancies and courses.


Posted by Billy | 15/01/2007 16:26   | Comments [0]

Posted in: internet

 Thursday, January 04, 2007

Oedipus and the Annunciation


Thursday 04 January 07

Dr Paul O'Keeffe in front of 'The Annunciation'
Audio downloads of the Lady Lever and Walker Art Galleries' December artwork of the month talks are now online.

At the Walker, Curator of British paintings Alex Kidson took a look at Henry Fuseli's 'The Death of Oedipus' (mp3/transcript/links). Fuseli's painting portrays a scene from the Sophocles play 'Oedipus at Colonus'.

At the Lady Lever, Dr Paul O'Keeffe gave a seasonal talk on 'The Annunciation' by Edward Burne-Jones (mp3/transcript/links). Paul discusses buying a bible and concordance, the connections between Eve and Mary, original sin, the V&A exhibition 'Renaissance domestic life in Italy', the model and her famous daughters, the history of the Grosvenor Gallery, Gilbert and Sullivan's 'Patience', Oscar Wilde, William Morris and Clause 8 of the Trust deed of the Lady Lever collection.

Posted by Billy | 04/01/2007 14:50   | Comments [0]

 Wednesday, December 06, 2006

Alison Jones at the Alima Centre


Wednesday 06 December 06

I spent yesterday afternoon at the Alima Centre with artist Alison Jones. Alison was taking us round the 'On the Edge' exhibition in the second floor gallery.

The exhibition is part of Dadafest (Disability and Deaf Arts Festival), 'exploring the physical and emotional issues of being forced to the
edge…of the city, the art scene, society, people’s consciousness and
view'.

Alison has produced an excellent sound piece for the exhibition 'Art, Lies and Audio Tapes' in which visitors to the Walker Art Gallery have been asked to provide a description of our popular painting 'And When Did You Last See Your Father?'. This audio is then played in the exhibition in front of an imprecise line drawing of the painting.

And When Did You Last See Your Father?

'Art, Lies and Audio Tapes' is a work in progress and one possibility is to produce a version of it for the Walker Art Gallery website in the new year. In the mean time, 'On the edge' continues at the Alima Centre until 15 December 2006.


Posted by Billy | 06/12/2006 18:25   | Comments [0]

Posted in: walker art gallery

One Bukantas and a pair of Emmersons


Wednesday 06 December 06

Casablanca CabinetCasablanca Cabinet
I've been catching up with a podcast backlog -  there are three recently recorded gallery talks now available to download.

Curator of Fine Art, Ann Bukantas (mp3/transcript/links) takes an extended look at Helen Chadwick's 'Viral Landscapes', a recent addition to the Walker Art Gallery's permanent collection.

Head of Decorative Arts, Robin Emmerson, found time last month to deliver object of the month talks at both the Walker and the Lady Lever Art Gallery.

At the Walker, Robin spoke about Ettore Sotsass' 'Casablanca Cabinet'  (mp3/transcript/links). The cabinet is displayed in the gallery's cafe, outside the entrance to the Craft and Design gallery, and there is a lot of background noise on the recording from the lunchtime crowds.

The next day Robin was at the Lady Lever to deliver his talk on the 'Moor Park mantelpiece' (mp3/transcript/links). Robin begins his talk by admitting that he knew little about the object when he was asked to deliver the talk.


Posted by Billy | 06/12/2006 18:04   | Comments [0]

 Monday, December 04, 2006

Forty years of designer fashion


Monday 04 December 06

Detail from Stella McCartney design
The new designer fashion costume display opened in the Craft and Design gallery of the Walker Art Gallery this Saturday (2 December 2006). Our online feature provides background information on the designs on display.

The display includes work by André Courrèges, Jean Muir, Bill Gibb, Yves St Laurent, Vivienne Westwood (Buffalo Girls and Anglomania), Tommy Hilfiger, Stella McCartney, Juicy Couture, Hardy Blechman.

Sam's already blogged about the arrival of the mannequins, a visit from Ian Silverberg and a hole in  the Vivienne Westwood dress; there's also a flickr set showing the mannequins in the textile conservation studio.


Posted by Billy | 04/12/2006 15:06   | Comments [0]

 Thursday, November 30, 2006

Last Christmas I Gave You My Art


Thursday 30 November 06

Airside, whose installation Insyde continues at the Walker Art Gallery, have opened a Christmas shop in Covent Garden.


Posted by Billy | 30/11/2006 16:54   | Comments [0]

 Thursday, November 23, 2006

Liverpool Biennial closing weekend


Thursday 23 November 06

Liverpool Biennial finishes this Sunday, 26 November 2006, which might explain why the Walker Art Gallery was so busy when I was in this lunchtime.

This weekend is your last chance to see John Moores 24 and the Walker's Cape Farewell exhibits (not forgetting an offline opportunity to see Digital Show).

Red Reflection, Graham Crowley'Red Reflection', Graham Crowley, John Moores 24

A couple of our Biennial exhibitions have been extended though, Insyde is at the Walker until 25 February 2007 and Cape Farewell is at the Conservation Centre until 28 January 2007.


Posted by Billy | 23/11/2006 16:19   | Comments [0]

Another Place in Belgium


Thursday 23 November 06

After looking at Sam's photos of the Lutyens model on our flickr account I came across this photograph recently posted by Andrew Cullen. It shows Antony Gormley's 'Another Place' sculpture on a beach in Belgium shortly before it was moved to its current home in Crosby.

'Another Place' in Belgium

Andrew had made the trip specifically to see the sculpture but arrived too late (the website had the wrong information, would never happen here of course...). Fortunately Andrew was able to see and photograph the sculpture recently in Crosby.

There are thousands of photographs of 'Another Place' on Flickr and you can see a great slideshow of the most 'interesting' photos of Gormley's sculpture.


Posted by Billy | 23/11/2006 15:44   | Comments [0]

 Monday, November 13, 2006

Judging the John Moores exhibition


Monday 13 November 06

Last week Ann Bukantas gave a gallery talk at the Walker Art Gallery looking at her experience of the judging process for John Moores 24. Ann was one of five jurors for the competition, alongside artists Sir Peter Blake, Jason Brooks and Tracey Emin and Director of Visual Arts at the British Council Andrea Rose.

John Moores 24 jury

Our recording of the talk is now available online (mp3/transcript/links).

The talk provided interesting answers to many questions including 'What do the jurors do if they recognise a particular artist's work?' and 'How is the final decision on the first prizewinner reached?'.


Posted by Billy | 13/11/2006 18:09   | Comments [0]

Digital Show available offline


Monday 13 November 06

Also at the Walker Art Gallery for the announcement of the John Moores 24 Visitors' Choice award were Ian and Minako from Art in Liverpool.

They were taking the opportunity to view a slideshow of images from their Digital Show online exhibition which are available to view in the Walker until the end of the Liverpool Biennial (26 November 2006).

Ian and Minako from Art in Liverpool
There are 200 images in the online exhibition created by 133 artists from 25 countries using a variety of digital methods.


Posted by Billy | 13/11/2006 13:41   | Comments [0]

Posted in: walker art gallery

Nicholas Middleton wins Visitors' Choice award


Monday 13 November 06

Nicholas Middleton and Ann Bukantas in front of 'Scene From a Contemporary Novel'

Artist Nicholas Middleton was at the Walker Art Gallery this lunchtime to collect a £1000 cheque from Fine Art Curator Ann Bukantas as the winner of the Visitors' Choice award for John Moores 24 for his painting 'Scene From a Contemporary Novel'.

The monochrome photorealist painting was a runaway winner of the award, receiving 709 votes out of 5063 cast by visitors to the exhibition. Runners-up were Graham Crowley for 'Red Reflection' and Gary 'Dollman' Sollars for 'When I Grow Up I Want To Go In There'.

Comments on the voting cards included 'Simply the best!', 'It has been very cleverly painted', 'LOVE IT!', 'Who needs colour to bring things to life?', 'All that is good about photo-realist painting', 'The girl in the picture could well be myself … Very evocative'.

Nicholas Middleton came to the gallery last month to give a talk on his painting, an audio recording and transcript is available online.


Posted by Billy | 13/11/2006 13:26   | Comments [0]

 Wednesday, November 08, 2006

Martin Greenland speaks for himself


Wednesday 08 November 06

Martin Greenland in the John Moores 24 exhibition space

We've already brought you Paul O'Keeffe's artwork of the month talk on John Moores 24 first prizewinner 'Before Vermeer's Clouds'. Last week, the artist himself, Martin Greenland, visited the exhibition to give a talk on the painting (mp3/transcript/links).

Over 45 minutes Martin discusses recurring themes in his John Moores entries, the decision to show his work without a frame, visions of Heaven, the Lake District, Exeter and the colourful Islamic architecture of Samarkand.


Posted by Billy | 08/11/2006 16:13   | Comments [0]

 Tuesday, November 07, 2006

Cape Farewell and Insyde extended


Tuesday 07 November 06

Alex Hartley portrait, Cape Farewell
Insyde, due to finish at the Walker Art Gallery on 26 November 2006, will now continue until 25 February 2007.

Cape Farewell, due to finish at National Conservation Centre on 26 November 2006, will now continue until 28 January 2007.

Related Cape Farewell displays at the Walker Art Gallery will still close on 26 November 2006.


Posted by Billy | 07/11/2006 15:25   | Comments [0]

 Thursday, November 02, 2006

Shopping trolleys, Ron Mueck and the Tate Modern slides


Thursday 02 November 06

A couple of online features from other museum groups have caught our attention this week. The Science Museum in London is hosting the touring exhibition Game On, featuring a history of computer games from the 1960s to the present day. The web team at the museum have documented the creation of their online feature on their blog, including commissioning a contemporary version of the classic game Pong set in a car park. Frankie Roberto has also blogged about online media coverage of the exhibition.

We've already seen how Brooklyn Museum are pioneering the use of Flickr online through their Brooklyn graffiti project, the latest set of photos on their Flickr account shows the installation of a new exhibition of works by Ron Mueck.

Finally, the Tate Modern website suggests visitors should arrive before midday if they want to go on Carsten Höller's Test Site, currently drawing huge crowds in the Turbine Hall. The Tate website has videos online showing a ride on each of the five slides (Realplayer only).

Installation of Ron Mueck exhibition

Posted by Billy | 02/11/2006 16:16   | Comments [0]

Posted in: internet

 Wednesday, October 25, 2006

'Pandora' by John Gibson


Wednesday 25 October 06

Paul O'Keeffe delivering his gallery talk on John Gibson's 'Pandora'

On Tuesday we recorded Paul O'Keeffe's latest Lady Lever Art Gallery sculpture of the month talk on John Gibson's 'Pandora' (mp3/transcript/links).

Paul discusses the controversy that the sculpture caused when it was first exhibited (alongside a version of the Walker Art Gallery's 'Tinted Venus') in the 1862 Great Exhibition. His talk also looks at the complicated commissioning process for the sculpture and the Greek legend of Pandora.


Posted by Billy | 25/10/2006 16:16   | Comments [0]

UK National Museums and Galleries Google Search Engine


Wednesday 25 October 06

Google Custom Search Engine allows any user to create their own customised google search engine. It's very easy to use and in minutes you can produce your own version of Google that returns results according to your own preferences.

To test the service I've quickly created an unoffical UK National Museums and Galleries version of Google. As its name suggests this search engine only returns results from the websites of national museums and galleries in the UK.

Try searching for 'current exhibitions' or 'job vacancies' and you'll see how useful these customised search engines can be.

Screenshot of the customised search engine

There is loads of potential with these. Art in Liverpool could have their own search engine that only indexed results from art organisations, artists, museums, funding bodies and galleries in Merseyside. The Chamber of Commerce could customise to only index results from their members' websites.

Google custom search engines can be added to your own site, modified to fit your site's design and you can make money from them by carrying adsense adverts with the results.


Posted by Billy | 25/10/2006 12:43   | Comments [0]

Posted in: internet

 Monday, October 23, 2006

New website for the Little Artists


Monday 23 October 06

Screenshot of the Little Artists' website

The Little Artists, who worked with the Walker Art Gallery to produce the lego Art Craziest Nation display and helped develop interpretation for the children's gallery Big Art for Little Artists, have launched their redesigned website.

The new site lets you 'find out about the artists Cake and Neave, their ideas, exhibitions and capers, and also see their Art for sale. There are also activities, an interactive gallery and an opportunity to send in your own artwork'.


Posted by Billy | 23/10/2006 13:15   | Comments [0]

Posted in: walker art gallery

Big Draw 2006 image gallery


Monday 23 October 06

Drawing by Gill Roberts
An online gallery of drawings produced by visitors to the Clore Natural History Centre at World Museum Liverpool during this year's Big Draw events.


Posted by Billy | 23/10/2006 11:14   | Comments [0]

Dr Paul O'Keeffe on 'Before Vermeer's Clouds'


Monday 23 October 06

Dr Paul O'Keeffe giving talk

The Walker Art Gallery artwork of the month for October is the first prizewinner from John Moores 24, Martin Greenland's 'Before Vermeer's Clouds'. Dr Paul O'Keeffe gave a gallery talk last Wednesday on the painting, now available online (mp3/transcript/links).

Paul discusses Greenland's previous four entries in John Moores exhibitions and his development through these paintings. The talk also covers Vermeer's 'View of Delft', the effect of frames on pictures, cloud formations and Greenland's red corduroy suit.


Posted by Billy | 23/10/2006 10:54   | Comments [0]

Posted in: walker art gallery

 Friday, October 20, 2006

'The Murder' provenance established


Friday 20 October 06

'The Murder', Paul Cézanne'The Murder', Paul Cézanne

The Walker Art Gallery website contains our spoliation list - works from Walker Art Gallery's collection whose provenance is either incomplete or uncertain. They are published to assist with the worldwide search for works of art that may have been wrongfully taken during the Holocaust and World War Two.

In publishing these lists we aim to advertise as widely as possible the details of specific works of art, the whereabouts and ownership of which cannot with confidence be specified for the years 1933-45.

'The Murder', by Paul Cézanne, has recently been removed from the list, after its provenance was established thanks to research by staff at the Art Loss Register.


Posted by Billy | 20/10/2006 12:49   | Comments [0]

Posted in: walker art gallery

 Tuesday, October 17, 2006

Julie Jones at St Nick's


Tuesday 17 October 06

Nipped down to St Nick's on Chapel Street in my lunch hour today to have a look at local artist Julie Jones' latest work, part of a Dying Frog independent show for the Biennial. The exhibition is great and Julie has documented her work on the frescoes online, an interesting look at her process and the life of a busy church.


Posted by Billy | 17/10/2006 14:52   | Comments [0]

 Wednesday, October 11, 2006

'Scene from a Contemporary Novel' talk online


Wednesday 11 October 06

'Scene from a Contemporary Novel', Nicholas Middleton

Artist Nicholas Middleton came into the Walker last week to give a talk on his painting 'Scene from a Contemporary Novel'. The painting is one of the entries in the John Moores 24 exhibition of contemporary painting, running at the Walker until 26 November 2006.

The photorealistic painting is a biennial highlight on feeling listless, whilst code and effect has a report on the talk itself.

In his talk Nicholas discussed inspirations such as Patrick Keiller's 'The City of the Future' exhibition at FACT and Jeff Wall, the photography and digital techniques used in creating the painting and the location near Brick Lane.

[mp3/transcript/links]


Posted by Billy | 11/10/2006 14:16   | Comments [0]

 Monday, October 09, 2006

Close-up view of leaf cutter ant's eye


Monday 09 October 06

Leaf cutter ant eye
This unusual view of one of our leaf cutter ants from the Bug House at World Museum Liverpool is a Scanning Electron Micrograph provided by Siobhan Watts from the National Conservation Centre. The micrograph is used as a teaching aid in the Bug House.

Update: (10/10/06)- flickr slideshow with more of the leaf cutter ant scanning electron micrographs

Posted by Billy | 09/10/2006 15:24   | Comments [0]

 Friday, October 06, 2006

LoveSport at World Museum Liverpool


Friday 06 October 06

St Bernard on bicycle

Our new exhibition, LoveSport, opens at World Museum Liverpool, tomorrow. The free exhibition runs from 7 October 2006 - 29 April 2007.

Pictured here from this morning's press call is St Bernard, the mascot of the St Helen's rugby league team.


Posted by Billy | 06/10/2006 15:41   | Comments [0]

Big Draw 2006 at National Museums Liverpool


Friday 06 October 06

Big Draw 2006

Big Draw is the national drawing campaign that runs throughout October annually. Our first event for is at World Museum Liverpool tomorrow, 7 October, an art workshop with artist Karl Eversley. Further events take place next weekend at World Museum Liverpool, the Walker Art Gallery, Lady Lever Art Gallery, National Conservation Centre and Merseyside Maritime Museum.


Posted by Billy | 06/10/2006 13:24   | Comments [0]

Stewart Bale At The River's Mouth


Friday 06 October 06

At The River's Mouth, a Merseyside blog looking at local history and contemporary culture, last week wrote about  Stewart Bale Ltd and our Stewart Bale 2.0 project.


Posted by Billy | 06/10/2006 11:34   | Comments [0]

Posted in: internet

 Friday, September 22, 2006

Anne Wortley and Henry VIII trading places


Friday 22 September 06

View of Room One, Walker Art Gallery

'Anne Wortley, Later Lady Morton' (the portrait behind the rope above) is a new loan to the Walker Art Gallery from Tate Britain. It is a temporary replacement for our portrait of 'Henry VIII' loaned to the Tate’s Holbein in England exhibition, 28 September 2006 – 7 January 2007. It has been hung in Room One of the Walker alongside Jean Clouet's 'Princess Marguerite of Angouleme' and 'Queen Elizabeth I - The Pelican Portrait', attributed to Nicholas Hilliard.

The panel text that accompanies the painting states:

It portrays Anne Wortley, daughter of Sir Richard Wortley of Yorkshire, in formal dress as worn at the court of James I. It is a typical Jacobean portrait. It aims not to create a convincing idea of space, which is rather awkwardly reproduced in this portrait, but to focus in almost hypnotic detail on the elaborate costume, ruff, head-dress, jewellery and other accessories. For this reason such portraits are sometimes referred to nowadays as ‘curtains & carpets’ paintings. The different qualities of the brushwork on this portrait suggest that it was perhaps painted by several artists from one workshop, each specialising in a different area, and some trained in the Netherlands.

View an enlarged image of the painting on the Tate Collection's website.


Posted by Billy | 22/09/2006 13:32   | Comments [0]

Posted in: walker art gallery

 Tuesday, September 19, 2006

Simone Martini and Stephen Bayley


Tuesday 19 September 06

'Christ Discovered in the Temple', Simone Martini

Sunday's Observer included a feature on 'The best-kept arts secrets in Britain'.

DJ Rob Da Bank nominated 'Another Place' ('amazing to look at and you don't pay to get in'), whilst 'the second most intelligent man in Britain', Stephen Bayley, chose the Walker Art Gallery's 'Christ Discovered in the Temple' by Simone Martini.

'Not exactly a secret, but certainly a surprise, is Simone Martini's Christ Discovered in the Temple in Liverpool's Walker Art Gallery. I knew this exquisite little picture as a child, long before I ever visited Siena. Martini was one of that magnificent city's greatest painters, working at the fascinating moment when Gothic simplicity became Renaissance sophistication. There's the effulgence of tooled gold, the lapis, the vermilion, but there's also subtle psychology: a superb object and a brilliant image.

Marvellous how this gorgeous southern picture found its way, through proud merchants and shippers, to the gloom of 19th-century Merseyside. It hangs now in Lancashire as a strange and haunting refugee from faraway Tuscany, a sudden jolt of Renaissance beauty enjoyed to the distant noise of buses.'


Posted by Billy | 19/09/2006 11:20   | Comments [0]

Posted in: walker art gallery

 Thursday, September 14, 2006

John Moores 24 first prizewinner announced


Thursday 14 September 06

Martin Greenland is the first prizewinner for John Moores 24 with his painting 'Before Vermeer's Clouds'. A full online catalogue is available, showing all 52 paintings with artists' statements and biographies.

Martin Greenland with his prizewinning painting

The exhibition opens to the public this Saturday, 16 September 2006, at the Walker Art Gallery, running until the end of the Biennial, 26 November 2006.

The other prizewinners announced are Matthew Burrows ('Baptism'), Graham Crowley ('Red Reflection'), Vincent Hawkins ('After Paul Nash'), James White ('In the Basement (Kit 10)').


Posted by Billy | 14/09/2006 18:17   | Comments [0]

Cape Farewell at the Walker and Conservation Centre


Thursday 14 September 06

Ice texts, David Buckland

Cape Farewell: Art and Climate Change opens this Saturday, 16 September 2006, continuing as part of Liverpool Biennial until 26 November 2006.

The exhibition is spread across several venues. Of our venues, the Walker and the Conservation Centre are participating, displaying works by Heather Ackroyd & Dan Harvey, Alex Hartley, David Buckland, Gautier Deblonde, Gary Hume and Nick Edwards.

Other works are in the Anglican Cathedral, Albert Dock and the Liverpool School of Art and Design, Hope Street (map).


Posted by Billy | 14/09/2006 16:37   | Comments [0]

 Wednesday, September 13, 2006

Coffee, biscuits, late nights, alchohol


Wednesday 13 September 06

Pulling together major exhibitions like John Moores 24 can be an eventful experience for those responsible. Here are Curator of Fine Art at the Walker Ann Bukantas' last-minute comments on the exhibition which opens this weekend.
 
'Since 1957. 24th exhibition. 2,300 paintings. Liverpool. Dark room. Five jurors. Four days. Five personalities. Five viewpoints. 3,450 slides. Practice session. Criteria, democratic decisions. Confidentiality. Anonymity maintained. Personal taste. Discussion. Professional knowledge. Careers, reputations, merit. Titled, untitled. Details. White sheets, artists’ gardens. Cats, cosmic, taupe. Yes. No. Maybe. Coffee, biscuits, late nights, alcohol. Slide dreams. Press calls. Bonding. Gallows humour. 268 shortlisted. Liverpool. Warehouse. Re-aquainted. Three days. Big sofa. Handlers. Painting parade. Issues arise, resolve. Is it knowing? Yes. No. Maybe. 52 selected. Favourites listed. Votes cast. Re-cast. Prizewinners. £25,000. Roof party. Napkin hats. Catalogue. Exhibition. Results announced. Visit the show. See our winner. Debate. Vote for yours.'


Posted by Billy | 13/09/2006 17:12   | Comments [0]

 Tuesday, September 12, 2006

'Self-portrait as a young man', Rembrandt


Tuesday 12 September 06

Detail from Rembrandt van Rijn's 'Self-portrait as a young man

Curator of Continental European Art Xanthe Brooke's picture of the month talk at the Walker Art Gallery for September was on Rembrandt van Rijn's 'Self-portrait as a young man'. A recording of the talk is now available online (mp3/transcript/links).

The painting was in the news earlier this year when the Rembrandt Research Project, suggested that it was painted by a studio assistant, Isack Jouderville, rather than Rembrandt. Xanthe's talk explains why curators and conservators at National Museums Liverpool don't believe it is possible to make such a firm judgement at this time.

Xanthe discusses the Rembrandt Research Project, the missing 'd' in the Walker painting's signature, the use of UV lights for looking at disturbances in the paint surface, Jan Lievens and the Royal Collection of Charles I, Penshurst Place, dendrochronology and why Rembrandt painted so many self-portraits.


Posted by Billy | 12/09/2006 15:55   | Comments [0]

Posted in: walker art gallery

Insyde movie clip


Tuesday 12 September 06

Insyde installation

First a preview image, then a construction shot, now Airside have sent us a movie clip of their Insyde installation which opens at the Walker Art Gallery this Saturday 16 September 2006 as part of the Liverpool Biennial.

The movie clip (with sound) is available to view here.


Posted by Billy | 12/09/2006 10:31   | Comments [0]

 Friday, September 08, 2006

Walker Art Gallery online room guide


Friday 08 September 06

Detail from the Walker Art Gallery map

Curators at the Walker Art Gallery recently asked if we could provide an online version of the printed gallery guide available free to visitors in the gallery. The print guide provides a map of the building with suggested highlights for visitors unfamiliar with the permanent collection.

The Walker Art Gallery online room guide is intended to give online visitors, many of whom will never have visited the gallery, a greater idea of the content of our displays. Alternative ways of browsing the collection online are provided through the A-Z index of artists (also incorporating artworks from Sudley House and Lady Lever Art Gallery) and the chronological Collection highlights. Any feedback on this new guide would be appreciated.


Posted by Billy | 08/09/2006 16:18   | Comments [0]

Posted in: walker art gallery

Frank Milner on George Morland's 'The Piggery'


Friday 08 September 06

We recorded Frank Milner's artwork of the month talk at the Lady Lever Art Gallery on Wednesday (mp3/transcript/links).

George Morland was arguably the most popular painter of the late 18th century but only two attendees out of a packed standing room only audience had previously heard of him.

Frank Milner discusses Morland's reputation as an alcoholic, debtor, womaniser and painter of 'exquisite technique'.


Posted by Billy | 08/09/2006 15:44   | Comments [0]

 Thursday, September 07, 2006

Big Dig II


Thursday 07 September 06

Mirroring the construction work happening throughout the city centre, a week away from the start of the Biennial and most of the city's galleries look like building sites. Construction of the Insyde installation was well under way on the first floor landing of the Walker Art Gallery this afternoon.

Construction of the Insyde installation at the Walker Art Gallery

Posted by Billy | 07/09/2006 15:24   | Comments [0]

Kings and Queens in the Lower Horseshoe Gallery


Thursday 07 September 06

The European Union Individual Chess Championships started at World Museum Liverpool yesterday. You can follow the games live online between 12.30 and 7pm for the next nine days.

European Union Individual Chess Championship at World Museum Liverpool
Stuart Burns has written about his visit, the top seed Nigel Short is seated in the far left of the photo above.


Posted by Billy | 07/09/2006 11:10   | Comments [0]

 Tuesday, September 05, 2006

Claw Club at World Museum Liverpool


Tuesday 05 September 06

OwlImage courtesy of Mark Tranchant

The Claw Club is the new monthly family session at World Museum Liverpool's Bug House and Clore Natural History Centre.

It is run by Paul Finnegan, Team Leader of the Bug House, Jenny Dobson, Bug House Demonstrator and Allice Stokke. Sessions so far have included included 'Encouraging wildlife to your garden' and 'Brilliant bones and amazing owl pellets'.

A joining form and details on upcoming sessions are available from the Claw Club webpages.


 


Posted by Billy | 05/09/2006 13:11   | Comments [0]

Your favourite colour


Tuesday 05 September 06

'eye for Colour' closed last Sunday, 3 September. This means that our favourite colour feature on the website is also finished. We asked what your favourite colour is and why? We received over 2600 votes and you can see the results and the reasons here.

We've got entries from all ages, from Maizie, age 2, - 'My favourite colour is yellow because it's like the sun', to Nita, age 72, 'Growing up in Liverpool I always said I wanted two boys and two girls and I'd dress the girls in yellow and purple!'.

This isn't just Liverpool's favourite colour either, we received entries from Tbilisi, Norway, Sydney, Pakistan, British Columbia, California, Seattle, St Petersburg, Singapore, Texas, Armenia, Latvia, New York, Hyderabad, Malaysia, Barbados, Maryland, Switzerland, Sweden, Romania, South Africa, Florida, Pennsylvania, Seville, Ireland, Germany, Poland, Portugal, Italy, The Netherlands, Ontario, Boston, Botswana, Vancouver, Pittsburgh, Brazil, Northern Ireland, Alaska, Grand Rapids, Beijing, Malta, New Jersey, Brisbane, Ohio, Vietnam, Bangalore, France, Samoa, Melbourne, Chicago, Japan, Cairo, Belgrade, North Carolina, Cyprus, Valencia, Madrid, Finland, Chile, Denmark and the Isle of Mann!


Posted by Billy | 05/09/2006 12:59   | Comments [0]

 Monday, September 04, 2006

Redisplay of the modern and contemporary collections


Monday 04 September 06

Karen previously mentioned a talk on the redisplay of the modern and contemporary collections at the Walker Art Gallery by Curator of Fine Art Ann Bukantas.

Last Thursday Ann gave the talk again and we recorded it and now make it available for audio download (mp3/transcript).

Curator of Fine Art Ann Bukantas gives a gallery talk on the redisplay of the modern and contemporary collections

Posted by Billy | 04/09/2006 17:33   | Comments [0]

Posted in: walker art gallery

Biennial blogger


Monday 04 September 06

Ian Jackson, Art in Liverpool

With less than two weeks to go until Liverpool Biennial begins, a reminder that Ian Jackson of the Art in Liverpool blog has a separate Liverpool Biennial 2006 Blog.

The Art in Liverpool blog grew out of Ian's popular Liverpool Biennial 2004 blog which remains an excellent online archive of the events.


Posted by Billy | 04/09/2006 13:25   | Comments [0]

Posted in: exhibitions | internet

John Moores 24 hang begins


Monday 04 September 06

Paintings waiting to be hung in the John Moores 24 exhibition space

The hanging of the John Moores 24 exhibition began this morning, the exhibition opens to the public on 16 September 2006. Judges Tracey Emin and Andrea Rose returned to the Walker Art Gallery to help Curator of Fine Art Ann Bukantas in deciding on the final placement of the paintings.

We've already announced the list of exhibitors, but I can't show you any of the paintings until after the announcement of the winner on 14 September.


Posted by Billy | 04/09/2006 13:11   | Comments [0]

Posted in: walker art gallery

 Friday, September 01, 2006

John Moores 24 exhibitors


Friday 01 September 06

'Slump/Fear (orange/black)', Alexis Harding, winner of the previous John Moores prize

We can now release the list of exhibitors in the John Moores 24 exhibition of contemporary painting. The exhibition runs at the Walker Art Gallery from 16 September to 26 November 2006 and the prizewinners, including the £25000 outright prize, will be announced on 14 September.

The exhibitors are Henny Acloque, Guy Allott, Carolina Ambida, Lucy Annat, Emma Bennett, Elaine Brown, Alan Brooks, Matthew Burrows, Gordon Cheung, Leigh Clarke, Graham Crowley, Matt Davies, Geraint Evans, Cynthia Girard, Martin Greenland, Andrew Griffiths, Andy Harper, David Harrison, Vincent Hawkins, Claude Heath, Günther Herbst, Gerard Hemsworth, Dale Holmes, Philip Jones, Neil Kelly, David Leapman, David Mabb, Jeff McMillan, David G. Martin, Eliza Meath Baker, Andrea Medjesi–Jones, Nicholas Middleton, Richard Moon, Jost Münster, Penny Neville-Lee, Alicia Paz, Sachiko Odashima, Hugo Platt, Daphne Plessner, Alex Ramsay, Andreas Rüthi, Gary ‘Dollman’ Sollars, Ben Spiers, Arabella Stewart, Michael Stubbs, Paul Thomas, Covadonga Valdés, Julian Wakelin, Caroline Walker, James White, Emily Wolfe and Clare Woods.


Posted by Billy | 01/09/2006 11:09   | Comments [0]

 Thursday, August 31, 2006

'eye for Colour' fades to black


Thursday 31 August 06

This weekend is your last chance to visit the 'eye for Colour' exhibition at World Museum Liverpool, ending Sunday 3 September 2006.

Tell us your favourite colour online and have it projected live into the exhibition space.


Posted by Billy | 31/08/2006 16:57   | Comments [0]

 Wednesday, August 30, 2006

John Moran on Pluto


Wednesday 30 August 06

Pluto and CharonThis is the clearest view yet of the distant planet Pluto and its moon, Charon, as revealed by NASA's Hubble Space Telescope. The image was taken by the European Space Agency's Faint Object Camera on February 21, 1994 when the planet was 4.4 billion km from Earth.

John Moran, Planetarium operator at World Museum Liverpool, sent this summary of the recent controversy surrounding Pluto:

'In August 2006, the International Astronomical Union held a meeting in Prague. The purpose of this meeting was to decide the fate of the ninth planet in our solar system, Pluto.
 
In light of recent discoveries in the Kuiper belt; a huge expanse of space bodies beyond Pluto, it has been decided to de-classify Pluto to the status of "Dwarf planet", therefore eliminating it from our nine planet system.
 
The definition of a planet is that it must move around the Sun in a continuous non interrupted orbit. It must have enough mass for its gravity to squash it into a spherical shape. And the plain of its orbit must lay in an almost straight line, similar to the other planets. The problem with Pluto, is that its orbit crosses that of Neptune and its plain is much steeper, so therefore very different to the other planets.
 
It has long been known that Pluto was probably a Kuiper belt object. But with the recent discoveries of Sedna and Zena, scientists were left with a dilemma. Do we keep adding more and more KBO's to the overall number of planets in our solar system? Or do we take the unprecedented step of demoting Pluto? They decided on the latter.
 
This may be a controversial step, and one that will upset many people. But as one scientist put it, "we must look at the solar system as it is, not as we would like it to be".'


Posted by Billy | 30/08/2006 17:47   | Comments [0]

'The Piggery', a Rembrandt self-portrait and Andromeda, M31


Wednesday 30 August 06

September's monthly updates are available on the National Museums Liverpool site now. Lady Lever Art Gallery artwork of the month will be 'The Piggery' by George Morland, free gallery talks by Frank Milner on 6 and 26 September 2006, 1pm.

'The Piggery', by George Morland

The Walker Art Gallery's object of the month will be Rembrandt van Rijn's 'Self-Portrait as a Young Man', with free gallery talks by Curator of Continental European Art Xanthe Brooke on 7 and 26 September 2006, 1pm.

September's Nightwatch feature is also available, with tips on viewing our neighbouring galaxy Andromeda, M31, both through the naked eye and with binoculars.


Posted by Billy | 30/08/2006 17:35   | Comments [0]

Snowdon from Llyn Nantlle, Richard Wilson and Eifion


Wednesday 30 August 06

Margaretr spotted this image on Flickr, a recent photograph by Eifion of the view of Snowdon from Llyn Nantlle. Richard Wilson's 18th century painting 'Snowdon from Llyn Nantlle' from the Walker Art Gallery's collection is shown below.

Photo by Eifion of the view of Snowdon from Llyn Nantlle
Snowdon from Llyn Nantlle, Richard Wilson

Posted by Billy | 30/08/2006 11:26   | Comments [0]

Posted in: walker art gallery

 Wednesday, August 23, 2006

Fortune's always hiding


Wednesday 23 August 06

Keeper of Art Galleries at National Museums Liverpool, Julian Treuherz, gave a lecture at the Lady Lever Art Gallery this afternoon on 'Bubbles', by Sir John Everett Millais.

Julian Treuherz delivering  a lecture at the Lady Lever Art Gallery on

The lecture is now available as an audio download from our site (mp3/transcript/links).

The 30 minute talk covers the long term loan of 'Bubbles' to the Lady Lever from Unilever, memento mori, fancy portraits, Sir Joshua Reynolds, the Maurits house at The Hague, competition between Pears Soap and Sunlight Soap, the Graphic magazine and the theme of death in Millais's paintings. 


Posted by Billy | 23/08/2006 18:12   | Comments [0]

 Tuesday, August 22, 2006

Last chance to see Rodin display at the Walker


Tuesday 22 August 06

'Minerva', Auguste Rodin

Our temporary display of six Rodin sculptures from the Walker Art Gallery's permanent collection ends on Bank Holiday Monday, 28 August 2006.

The six bronze sculptures - 'Danaid', 'Death of Athens', 'Eve', 'Fleeting Love', 'Minerva', 'Sister and Brother' - were all bequeathed to the Walker in the 1920s by Liverpool wine merchant James Smith.

A recording of Curator of Continental Art Xanthe Brooke's May artwork of the month talk on 'Danaid' is also available online (mp3 file/transcript/links).


Posted by Billy | 22/08/2006 17:59   | Comments [0]

 Monday, August 21, 2006

A huge bucket of bramble and five dishes of donkey dung


Monday 21 August 06

This week's ingredients list for the livestock in the Bug House in World Museum Liverpool:

Feeding the Dung BeetlesDung beetles feeding on dung

• 1 huge bucket full of Bramble
• 7 pots of fresh food plant
• 7 bags full of fresh grass
• 5 bags full of petals
• 5 dishes full of donkey dung
• 10 handfuls of fish flake
• 1/2 handful of honey nut loops
• 1/2 handful of rabbit pellets
• 1 handful of bran
• 2 handfuls of special Bug House recipe insect mix
• 3 handfuls of special Bug House recipe hermit crab food
• 1/2 cup of ambrosia bee food
• 6 oranges
• 6 apples
• 6 bananas
• 1 lettuce
• 2 boxes of crickets
• 1 box of flies
• 1/2 box of mealworms


Posted by Billy | 21/08/2006 12:29   | Comments [0]

 Thursday, August 17, 2006
 Wednesday, August 16, 2006

The reproductive organs of a Meadow Cranesbill


Wednesday 16 August 06

Staff at World Museum Liverpool's Clore Natural History Centre have been experimenting with their new macro lens and have sent over this image.

Reproductive organs of a Meadow Cranesbill.

According to Mike Graham, Curatorial Manager of the Bug House, Planetarium, Aquarium and Clore Natural History Centre, 'We are looking at the reproductive organs of a Meadow Cranesbill, a wild flower which is a member of the Geranium family. The red stalk like rod in the centre is the carpel which consists of the stigma which receives the pollen and the style and ovary which contains the ovules. This is the female part and the black anthers on the stamens surrounding the stigma are where the pollen is produced. If you look closely you can see the pollen grains on the anthers. Bees cross pollinate the flowers when they are collecting nectar.'


Posted by Billy | 16/08/2006 13:51   | Comments [0]

 Thursday, August 03, 2006

Bog houses, stink traps and Dr Pridgin Teale's 'Pictorial Guide to Domestic Sanitary Defects'


Thursday 03 August 06

Our latest downloadable mp3 is Robin Emmerson's gallery talk on Fritz Spiegl's 'Loophonium' (mp3/transcript/links). The 'Loophonium' (sometimes known as the 'Harpic-cord') is the Walker Art Gallery object of the month and is a cross between a euphonium and a toilet.

The twenty minute talk covers descending valves, ophicleides, transverse spring slides, the metamorphosis of ajax, bog houses, stink traps, Banner's Patent Drain Trap, Alexander Cummings, Dr Pridgin Teale's 'Pictorial Guide to Domestic Sanitary Defects', the washdown closet, a concerto for two tuning forks, Ibert's 'March for a Dead Parrot', Z Cars, Handel's 'Water Music' and the Loophonium itself.

Robin (Head of Decorative Arts at National Museums Liverpool) will be delivering the talk again at the Walker Art Gallery on Thursday 24 August 2006.


Posted by Billy | 03/08/2006 11:48   | Comments [0]

 Wednesday, August 02, 2006

Graffiti in Brooklyn


Wednesday 02 August 06

Image of graffiti in Brookly, copyright Ken SteinImage copyright Ken Stein

The Brooklyn Museum of Art, have used innovative online services to promote and enhance their current exhibition 'Graffiti'. A series of podcasts are available, allowing visitors to transfer the audio files to their mp3 player and bring them on an exhibition visit. The museum also has its own Flickr account, which it has used to invite the public to upload their own photos of graffiti in Brooklyn. The Brooklyn graffiti flickr group currently has over 1200 photos submitted.

Our own online exhibition Stewart Bale 2.0 features classic photographs from our archives 'recreated' by Liverpool-based flickr photographers.


Posted by Billy | 02/08/2006 11:26   | Comments [0]

 Monday, July 31, 2006

Five years of feeling listless


Monday 31 July 06

Congratulations to Stuart Ian Burns, ex-employee of the Walker Art Gallery, on five years of feeling listless.


Posted by Billy | 31/07/2006 12:08   | Comments [0]

Posted in: walker art gallery

 Thursday, July 27, 2006

Millais, a toilet and the Whirlpool Galaxy


Thursday 27 July 06

August's monthly features
Regular monthly updates for August are live on the site. The Lady Lever Art Gallery's picture of the month will be 'Bubbles', by Sir John Everett Millais. It is on long-term loan from Unilever, free gallery talks will be held on Thursday 10 and Wednesday 23 August 2006.

Object of the month at the Walker Art Gallery is recent acquisition 'Loophonium', by the late Fritz Spiegl. The loophonium, a euphonium crossed with a toilet, was created by Spiegl for an April Fools' Day concert in 1960. Free gallery talks will be held on Tuesday 1 and Thursday 24 August, 1-1.30pm.

August's Nightwatch feature for World Museum Liverpool higlights sightings of Jupiter, Venus, the constellation of Pegasus, M51 (The Whirlpool Galaxy) and the Perseid meteor shower.

For those wanting to know what the night sky was like in the recent past, our Nightwatch archives date back to the beginning of 2004.


Posted by Billy | 27/07/2006 09:52   | Comments [0]

 Tuesday, July 25, 2006

Meet the Flowerbabs


Tuesday 25 July 06

The Flowerbabs graphics

First image from the interactive installation that Airside have created to be shown during the Liverpool Biennial (18 September 2006 - 26 November 2006).

The Walker Art Gallery has commissioned the immersive artwork which will consist of physical objects, wall projections and music composed by Fred Deakin of Lemon Jelly.

Full press release here.


Posted by Billy | 25/07/2006 10:30   | Comments [0]

Posted in: walker art gallery

 Friday, July 21, 2006

SewStylish visits Norman Parkinson


Friday 21 July 06

"I was completely blown away.

Entering the two small rooms which housed the display, I counted 25 of his photographs. A small display perhaps, but each and every one of them was absolutely beautiful.

The way in which Parkinson used the landscape to bring out the beauty of the subject is astonishing. But Parkinson doesn’t restrict himself to conventionally beautiful landscapes; the Grand Canyon or a Scottish mansion provide as dramatic a backdrop as the New York skyline or a rainswept Parisian street."

Read the SewStylish review in full here.

Norman Parkinson: Portraits in Fashion continues at the Lady Lever Art Gallery until 24 September 2006.


Posted by Billy | 21/07/2006 10:06   | Comments [0]

 Wednesday, July 19, 2006

David and Julia Roberts


Wednesday 19 July 06

Baalbec - Ruins of the Temple of Bacchus

Walker Art Gallery Education Officer Peter Betts's picture of the month talk on 'Baalbec - Ruins of the Temple of Bacchus' is now available to download from our website (mp3/transcript/links).

The talk highlights the remarkable life story of the artist David Roberts, who began his career as a scene painter for a travelling circus and by the age of 55 was commissioned by Queen Victoria to paint the opening of the Great Exhibition of 1851.

Peter's talk also covers a short history of the Walker's picture of the month series, lithographs, the birth of the daguerreotype, an architectural appreciation of the world heritage site of Baalbek and a film enthusiast's appreciation of Julia Roberts's teeth.


Posted by Billy | 19/07/2006 12:53   | Comments [0]

Posted in: walker art gallery

 Friday, July 07, 2006

Stick insects for schools


Friday 07 July 06

Stick insect

The Bug House at World Museum Liverpool's latest outreach project gives schools the opportunity to run a series of experiments with stick insects. All of these experiments fit into the key stage 3 curriculums for Science, Maths and English.

Schools are given all the equipment to care for their stick insects and run the experiments.

The species of stick insect used is Carausius morosus - the Indian or laboratory stick insect. It is an easy to keep, hardy species that will feed on a wide variety of food plants. The lifecycle is completed fairly quickly enabling the schools to witness every stage in the insect’s development.

A Bug House demonstrator visits the schools and helps set up the stick insects vivarium and run through all the experiments. The schools are also given a detailed pack explaining how to care for the stick insects as well step by step instructions on how to run the experiments. This includes student and teacher handouts and answer sheets.

Interested schools should contact Jenny Dobson, Bug House demonstrator.


Posted by Billy | 07/07/2006 14:47   | Comments [0]

 Monday, July 03, 2006

Meadow


Monday 03 July 06

Meadow

Meadow is an installation at World Museum Liverpool highlighting litter and recycling issues. Children have been working with artists to create flowers out of plastic materials that would usually be sent for landfill.

The partnership project is led by the National Wildflower Centre in Knowsley and is free to view at World Museum Liverpool until Thursday 24 August.

The meadow is still growing and there are events at the Prince's Park Carnival (5 August 2006) and Knowsley Flower Show (6 August 2006) allowing children to create new flowers for the meadow.

More information (including a teachers resource pack) is available from the National Wildflower Centre on 0151 738 1913.


Posted by Billy | 03/07/2006 15:46   | Comments [0]

 Thursday, June 29, 2006

Stewart Bale 2.0 - documenting Liverpool


Thursday 29 June 06

Pete Carr's photo of the Pier Head from the Mersey FerryPete Carr's photo of the Pier Head from the Mersey Ferry

The latest in our series of online-only virtual exhibitions looks at the growing phenomenon of the online photo management and sharing service Flickr.

For Stewart Bale 2.0 - documenting Liverpool, we contacted Liverpool-based photographers who had come to our attention on Flickr and asked them to recreate classic photos from our archive of photos from Liverpool photographic company Stewart Bale Ltd.


Posted by Billy | 29/06/2006 12:39   | Comments [0]

Posted in: exhibitions

 Thursday, June 22, 2006

View of the Piazza San Giovanni e Paulo


Thursday 22 June 06

Frank
This afternoon Frank Milner gave a free talk at the Lady Lever Art Gallery on James Holland's 'View of the Piazza San Giovanni e Paulo'.

An audio recording of the talk is available to download online now (mp3/transcript/links).


Posted by Billy | 22/06/2006 17:37   | Comments [0]

 Monday, June 19, 2006

NML podcast launched


Monday 19 June 06

Dr
Over the last few weeks, we've been recording talks and lectures held at the Lady Lever Art Gallery and the Walker Art Gallery. Some of these free talks and lectures are now available to download as audio files to be played on your computer or personal mp3 player. A podcast feed is also available for advanced users (as well as instructions on how to use these files!).

The first talks available are:


Posted by Billy | 19/06/2006 14:30   | Comments [0]

 Tuesday, June 13, 2006

Big Art needs you!


Tuesday 13 June 06

Big Art for Little Artists

Our Learning department are looking for volunteers to help at Big Art for Little Artists during this summer's school holidays. There will be an open morning on 7 July, 10am at the Walker Art Gallery for those interested, please contact first to confirm your attendance. [Edit:21/06/2006 - there are no more places on this open day]

We run a large volunteering scheme at National Museums Liverpool, including work experience for schoolchildren and work placements for students.


Posted by Billy | 13/06/2006 15:22   | Comments [0]

Posted in: walker art gallery

 Wednesday, April 12, 2006

Rebekkah likes YELLOW, BLUE AND GREEN


Wednesday 12 April 06

eye for ColourWe've now received over 1000 entries in our 'favourite colour' online poll, accompanying the 'eye for Colour' exhibition at World Museum Liverpool. Most entries  are short and sweet, unlike no.1051 - Rebekkah O'Gorman from Birkenhead:

'MY FAVOURITE COLOUR IS YELLOW BECAUSE I LIKE PLAYING ON THE BEACH AND I LIKE FUDGE AND I LIKE COLLECTING LIMESTONE THAT IS YELLOW AND I LIKE THE YELLOW BRICK ROAD ON WIZARD OF OZ ALSO I LIKE YELLOW TOPS AND A BONNET THAT IS YELLOW AND I LIKE YELLOW CHICKS AND VANILLA ICECREAM ALSO I LIKE MAKING A BONNET WITH YELLOW CHICKS AND YELLOW STRING AND YELLOW PAINT ALSO I LIKE THE STONES OF TUTANKHARMEN AND I LIKE YELLOW MARBLES AND I LIKE YELLOW CHIPS AND I LIKE YELLOW PAINT AND I LIKE YELLOW SLIDES AND MY OTHER COLOUR IS SKY BLUE BECAUSE I LIKE THE SKY AND I LIKE BLUE SWEETS AND I LIKE BLUE PAINT AND STRING AND I LIKE BLUEPUPPETS AND MY OTHER COLOUR IS GOLD BECAUSE I LIKE GOLD AND MY OTHER COLOUR IS GREEN BECAUSE I LIKE MONEY TO SPEND ON LOTS OF TOYS, NECKLACES, AND SPECIALLY THE BOOK CALLED GREEN EGGS AND HAM'

All entries received through the website are projected live into the gallery exhibition space. Let us know your favourite colour.


Posted by Billy | 12/04/2006 14:38   | Comments [0]

 Monday, April 10, 2006

Bunny Run Prizewinner


Monday 10 April 06

Bunny

Margaret Houlston (pictured right) was in the Walker Art Gallery on Saturday to collect her first prize in the Bunny Run image competition. The prize was to have her picture professionally framed.

Winners and runners-up images can now be seen online at the Dubble chocolate website.


Posted by Billy | 10/04/2006 14:23   | Comments [0]

Posted in: walker art gallery

Isambard Kingdom Brunel


Monday 10 April 06

Brunel 200th AnniversaryYesterday was the 200th anniversary of the birth of the engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel. To mark the anniversary we've produced a trail leaflet showing relevant items from our collections on display in the Merseyside Maritime Museum.

Items include an oil painting of SS Great Britain and an exhibition model of PS Great Western.


Posted by Billy | 10/04/2006 10:11   | Comments [0]

 Friday, April 07, 2006

Carrots and Daffodils


Friday 07 April 06

Press call for Bunny Run
Press call at Lady Lever Art Gallery this morning to promote our Bunny Run easter activity.


Posted by Billy | 07/04/2006 15:37   | Comments [0]

 Thursday, April 06, 2006

Judging begins for John Moores 24


Thursday 06 April 06

Ann Bukantas, Jason Brooks, Sir Peter Blake and Tracey EminThis week has seen the completion of the first stage of the judging process for this year's John Moores exhibition of contemporary painting. The judges are Ann Bukantas, Curator of Fine Art at the Walker Art Gallery and the artists Tracey Emin, Sir Peter Blake and former John Moores prizewinner Jason Brooks.

This week's judging process involved going through the 2300 entries received, each entry viewed on a slide projector. From these the judges have been selecting up to 500 works which will be called in for judging in June 2006.


Posted by Billy | 06/04/2006 17:35   | Comments [0]

Posted in: walker art gallery

Design your own exhibition poster


Thursday 06 April 06

Modernism posterModernism: Designing a New World 1914 - 1939, the new blockbuster exhibition at the V & A in London, opens today. The exhibition microsite gives a great taste of what visitors can expect.

Best of all, you can design your own poster to promote the exhibition, here's my effort on the left.


Posted by Billy | 06/04/2006 13:40   | Comments [0]

 Monday, April 03, 2006

New children's gallery opens at the Walker Art Gallery


Monday 03 April 06

Loyd

Loyd Grossman was at the Walker Art Gallery last Friday to welcome the first visitors into 'Big Art for Little Artists', our new children's gallery.

The gallery has been specifically designed for children up to the age of eight, introducing them to art and the Walker's collections through a series of fun informal learning activities and games.

We've created a series of online features to support these aims:

Early reviews:
'Great Art... right from the start', The Daily Telegraph'
'Little Artists, Big Ideas', The Guardian
'Walker Art Gallery in Liverpool opens a new gallery just for kids', 24 Hour Museum
'Matilda goes to Liverpool', 24 Hour Museum

Posted by Billy | 03/04/2006 10:49   | Comments [0]

Posted in: walker art gallery

 Wednesday, March 29, 2006

Jodi Web Accessibility Awards 2006 shortlist


Wednesday 29 March 06

The Jodi Awards 'recognise museum, gallery, library,archive or heritage websites that demonstrate commitment to meeting web accessibility standards'. Nominated sites are assessed by an experienced panel of judges, supported by formal testing by disability experts and disabled users.

The 2006 shortlist has been announced:

More information on the awards and the nominated sites is available on the 24 Hour Museum - Jodi Web Accessibility Awards 2006 Shortlist Announced.

National Museums Liverpool's web accessibility guidelines.


Posted by Billy | 29/03/2006 17:04   | Comments [0]

 Wednesday, March 22, 2006

In the Recycle Bin: Henry VIII


Wednesday 22 March 06

Henry VIIIIt's always frustrating when work never sees the light of day. We're creating a children's interactive for Big Art which involves placing the Little Artist characters into paintings from the Walker collection. We've had a lot of fun with it, but had to cut some of the images out to keep the numbers down.

Henry didn't make the cut.


Posted by Billy | 22/03/2006 17:53   | Comments [0]

Posted in: walker art gallery

Freddie Flintoff and JMW Turner


Wednesday 22 March 06

We are continually adding new and improved scans of our paintings to the website. This morning I added 9 larger images of paintings to the collections pages. The enlarged images can be seen at:

Detail from 'Well's Cathedral', JMW Turner'Dutch Merchant Ships in a Storm', Ludolf Bakhuizen (previously black and white)
'The Magdelan', Paulus Bor
'Mirage', Michael Raedecker
'The Nymph of the Fountain', Lucas Cranach the Elder
'Vespers', John Singer Sargent
'Ulysses shooting through the rings', Francesco Primaticcio
'Well's Cathedral', JMW Turner
'Virgin and Child in Glory', Bartolome Esteban Murillo
'Pieta', Ercole de' Roberti

Congratulations to Andrew Flintoff and the England cricket team for their 212 run victory over India this morning, the cricket match pictured is a detail from Turner's 'Well's Cathedral', circa 1795, in the Walker Art Gallery.
Detail from 'Well's Cathedral', JMW Turner


Posted by Billy | 22/03/2006 15:29   | Comments [0]

Posted in: walker art gallery

 Friday, March 17, 2006

Betty, Sheedy and Dante Gabriel Rossetti


Friday 17 March 06

Betty the Royal Python with her handler in front of Rosetti's 'Dante's Dream'It pays to always have a camera with you when you visit one of our venues. I was at the Walker Art Gallery this afternoon to see the new entrance but ended up bumping into Betty, a Royal Python, with her handler from the North Wales Raptor and Reptile Sanctuary.

They were part of a hands-on demonstration for National Science Week. The sanctuary is a respite centre for sick and injured birds of prey and reptiles, both wild and captive bred. Betty was brought into the sanctuary on Christmas Eve and is around 8 years old. Royal Pythons are becoming a popular pet, despite a potential lifespan in captivity of up to 40 years.

The website features a 'rogues gallery' of sanctuary residents (some of whom are up for adoption), Everton fans should look out for 'Sheedy' the tortoise.

Betty can be seen here in front of Dante Gabriel Rossetti's 'Dante's Dream'.


Posted by Billy | 17/03/2006 17:59   | Comments [0]

Posted in: walker art gallery