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National Museums Liverpool Blog - Thursday, October 27, 2011

 Thursday, October 27, 2011

Blake's a busy bee


Thursday 27 October 11

The ‘Godfather’ of British Pop Art, Sir Peter Blake has been busy lately. Not only was he recently announced as the first ever patron of the John Moores Painting Prize he will also be designing the Brit Awards statuette for next years ceremony.

Brit award bosses see Sir Peter as being synonymous with the best of British music, which is why he was chosen to design the prize. Not only did he design the cover for The Beatles album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band he also designed album covers for Paul Weller and Oasis.

Unfortunately for me I won’t be winning a Brit award for Best British Female next year (although I think I should) so the closest I’ll get to a Sir Peter Blake creation will be the Alphabet display at the Walker Art Gallery. But this is good enough for me, An Alphabet is charming and funny and definitely worth seeing.

 An artist stands next to his artworkSir Peter Blake stands with the letter 'P' in the Alphabet display at the Walker Art Gallery.


Posted by Alison | 27/10/2011 14:50   | Comments [0]

 Monday, October 24, 2011

In the Mersey


Monday 24 October 11

Liverpool port scene
In the Mersey

As Curator of Maritime Collections (ship models and paintings) I look after an impressive paintings collection which reflects Liverpool's influential and thriving maritime history.
I am currently working on the content for next year's exhibition Titanic and Liverpool: the untold story. One of the themes will be 'Home port' which highlights Liverpool as the shipping capital of the World.
One of the objects on display for the exhibition will be Max Sinclair's 'In the Mersey' which reflects Liverpool at the height of its influence as a port in 1889. The subtle Titanic link in this painting is the 'City of New York' liner depicted near the Liverpool landing stage.
As Titanic began her maiden voyage, the City of New York ship which was docked at Southampton at the time broke her moorings and almost collided with Titanic. This was caused by the huge suction created when Titanic left the dock.
The 'City of New York' was described as the fastest and largest ship during her career as a three-funnelled passenger liner.
'In the Mersey' is currently on display in the Art and the Sea gallery.
Bye for now.


Posted by Rebecca | 24/10/2011 14:45   | Comments [0]

 Friday, October 21, 2011

Marvel at Matisse: Family Fun Week


Friday 21 October 11

It seems like only yesterday that it was the summer holidays and already the October half-term is here. So if you fancy being creative this half-term with the kids, the Walker Art Gallery is putting on a week full of activities from 24-29 October in conjunction with the first UK public showing of The Art Books of Henri Matisse exhibition. 

Fun activities include:

A world of words 
24, 27 October
1pm & 2pm
An interactive workshop of poems and movement. Bring art to life through play, imagination and words. (Collect a ticket on the day, ages 3+).

Big top at the Walker 
25, 26 October
12 noon- 4pm
Explore the exhibition, be inspired by the circus images, have fun with members of Circus Zapparelli and learn some circus skills. (ages 5+).

Jazzy prints 
27, 28 October
1pm, 2pm & 3pm
Get hands on and have a go at making your own print in our artist-led session. (Collect a free ticket on the day, ages 7+).

Helen Maher music 
28, 29 October
1.30-3.30pm
Enjoy a performance of French accordion music.

A page from Matisse's art book'Le Clown' ('The Clown'), plate I of XX from the illustrated book Jazz, 1947. Bank of America Merrill Lynch Collection. © Succession H. Matisse/DACS 2011


Posted by Alison | 21/10/2011 16:25   | Comments [0]

Posted in: walker art gallery

Bargain books!


Friday 21 October 11

The nights are drawing in and there’s a definite chill in the air - it’s getting to that time of year when the best thing to do is curl up on the sofa with a good book. Well it just so happens we’re starting the sales unseasonably early with a special pop-up stall selling bargain books at the Maritime Museum. On Wednesday and Thursday next week (26 & 27 October) drop in to the museum foyer and grab yourself a bargain. Now I don’t want to mention the C word, but if you were looking to do some early ‘seasonal’ shopping this could be just the ticket…

man and woman reading books

Posted by Angela | 21/10/2011 15:21   | Comments [0]

 Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Velociraptor: the film star dinosaur


Wednesday 19 October 11

Our Age of the Dinosaur exhibition opens this Saturday 22 October and dino-excitement is reaching fever pitch at World Museum!

Curator and dino-expert Geoff Tresise has taken a breather to tell us about Velociraptor, one of the stars of the exhibition...


Animatronic velociraptor

Steven Spielberg's 'Jurassic Park' brought dinosaurs back to life with impressive realism. It was also the film that made Velociraptor a star!  Tyrannosaurus was shown dismembering a goat and chasing after a jeep.  However, it was the much smaller raptors which unexpectedly proved to be the more dangerous. These raptors were shown as intelligent and inventive, very blood-thirsty and given to hunting in groups. 

Raptors had large brains, suggesting that they were indeed unusually intelligent for dinosaurs.  They had numerous sharp teeth but their main weapons were sickle-shaped claws on each hind-foot with which they could slash and disembowel their prey.  Hunting in packs they could attack and kill much larger dinosaurs but it is likely that they also took food whenever and wherever they found it.

Velociraptor (a name meaning 'speedy thief) stood about a metre tall and was one of the largest of the raptor group.  In the Age of the Dinosaur exhibition there is a solitary Velociraptor attempting to raid a nest of eggs guarded by the horned dinosaur Protoceratops. Look out for it on your way around the exhibition!


Posted by Lisa | 19/10/2011 14:37   | Comments [0]

Posted in: exhibitions | world museum liverpool
Tagged with: Dinosaur | film

Matisse and friends


Wednesday 19 October 11

Over at the Walker Art Gallery excitement is mounting for the opening of the new exhibition The Art Books of Henri Matisse opening this Friday 21 October.

The Walker Art Gallery team have been working hard on getting the exhibition ready for the public including volunteer curator Emma Sumners. Emma has been curating a small display of artists’ books going on display in the exhibition to compliment the Matisse artists’ books.

The artists’ books from the Walker Art Gallery's permanent collection going on display include works by Derek Boshier, Gilbert & George, Tom Phillips, Jeff Nuttall and Ed Ruscha.  

Yesterday Emma installed the artists books and as the picture shows it looks great. If you’d like to see the team, including Emma, working hard behind the scenes visit Flickr where you see an album of images. 

A young woman fills a display caseEmma Sumner makes the finishing touches to the Artists' Books display case.

Posted by Alison | 19/10/2011 11:02   | Comments [0]

Posted in: walker art gallery

 Monday, October 17, 2011

Paris' Fashion Week


Monday 17 October 11

Liverpool is well known for its glamorous girls and fashionable fellas so it’s no surprise that the city hosts an annual fashion week.

From Tuesday 18 – Saturday 22 October 2011 there will be 40 catwalk shows over five nights at venues across the city centre, with live entertainment from fresh talent every night.

In the weeks leading up to Liverpool Fashion Week many local designers  were busy preparing for the biggest fashion event in the North West including new designer Paris G.

Paris G even did a photo shoot at the Walker Art Gallery a month ago where models wore her creations for a photo shoot. The models had their pictures taken amongst the sculptures in the Sculpture Gallery which created the perfect backdrop for the beautiful Grecian style dresses they wore.

Paris G will show her collection on the opening night of Liverpool Fashion Week where she will be giving out postcards featuring the pictures taken at the Walker.

Two models pose either side of a sculptureParis G's designs are modelled in the Sculpture Gallery at the Walker © Alex Nicholson

Posted by Alison | 17/10/2011 11:07   | Comments [0]

Posted in: walker art gallery
Tagged with: sculpture

 Thursday, October 13, 2011

The Museum of Liverpool’s got style!


Thursday 13 October 11

Juice logo

So, it's official. The Museum of Liverpool's got style. As if we didn't know!

The museum has been nominated in The Visitor Award category at the Juice FM Style Awards.

The Style Awards are Juice FM’s annual celebration of style in Liverpool, with award categories ranging from the "Most Stylish Scouser" award to the "Lifestyle Award".

The people of Liverpool nominated their top three in each category.

Not that we're trying to influence you, but you can vote for the Museum of Liverpool now at: http://promo.u-loader.com/juicefm/style-awards/visitor-award.html. But be quick - voting closes on 23 October.


Posted by Lynn | 13/10/2011 16:58   | Comments [0]

Posted in: museum of liverpool
Tagged with: award

John Kirby - exploring Magritte


Thursday 13 October 11

Our curators at the Walker Art Gallery are currently working on a project with the contemporary artist, John Kirby, whose paintings have been compared to the work of René Magritte in the past.

Although John doesn't really see this similarity himself, he still took up the invitation to visit the Magritte exhibition at Tate Liverpool when he visited recently. It turned out to be a revelation... 


John Kirby looking at paintings in the WalkerJohn Kirby having a look at paintings in the Walker before visiting Tate Liverpool.

Over the years, my work as an artist has occasionally been compared to that of the Belgian Surrealist, René Magritte. Although I found his work interesting I was never influenced by him as I was by say Edward Hopper, The American Realist painter or Balthus who depicted claustrophobic interiors charged with an uncomfortable eroticism.

I can see vague similarities in the way Magritte painted his rather stiff and secretive characters and I was once in a show of contemporary artists that seemed to the organisers at the Modern Art Museum in Ostend, Belgium to have an affinity with the Belgian artists but I was wary and a little bored by the assumed link. So when I was asked I visited the show at the Tate Liverpool, tired after a long day and without much enthusiasm. However, I was wrong to dismiss the artist.

The beautifully hung and lit show was a revelation. There were many paintings and some sculpture that I hadn’t seen before, even in reproduction and those I thought I knew quite well held a strange atmospheric mystery. It seemed like a very comprehensive overview and perfectly suited to the Tate's intimate rooms. Dark and secretive.

Perhaps artists look at the work of other artists' from a different perspective  and we sometimes miss the point. Magritte is a story teller not, I feel, over interested in or obsessed by the formalities of drawing and painting. He was exploring being alive in the middle of the 20th century in a Europe of dictators, terrifyingly destructive political systems and post-Freudian angst. He depicts the fractured narrative of dreams and nightmares and retains a sense of magic and humour.

The show takes us on a voyage through his long career and we see how the painting begin to be formed in Magritte's use of film, photographs, notes and sketches. We also see him in relationship to his fellow Surrealists.

Magritte's influence remains potent in Western culture, advertising and all forms of absurdist visual comedy such as Monty Python's Flying Circus. He speaks to us in a language we can recognise (even if we can't begin to understand) about the madness and psychological confusion of life and the individual's search for meaning within it. Art as good as this helps us to see the world in a different way an I find myself looking at things afresh through Magritte's distorting prism. Nothing is quite how it seems.


Posted by Lisa | 13/10/2011 13:07   | Comments [0]

Posted in: walker art gallery
Tagged with: art | contemporary art

 Monday, October 10, 2011

The Pier Head Time Warp


Monday 10 October 11

Image of galleryThe People's Republic gallery, featuring the life size Liver Bird and scale model of the Pier Head. (c) Mark McNulty

The Museum of Liverpool is hosting a free family-friendly event in The People's Republic gallery this weekend, working with artists collective Re-Dock to create a film to document the life of the Pier Head.

People of all ages are invited to the Museum of Liverpool on Saturday 15 October to get involved with an interactive filmmaking experiment aiming to create a film that mixes old and new footage of the Pier Head together, to create a looping video mix that will take the audience on a journey through time.

If you have any old or new video footage of the Pier Head and would like to be involved in this collaborative video project, Re-Dock is inviting you to contribute this so that it can be used to create the film which will be show on gallery during the day.
Whether you have footage or not, and would like to take the role of editor during this unique film experience, pop along to the Museum of Liverpool between 12 and 4pm on Saturday 15 October to try your hand.

How you can get involved

Re-Dock is looking for digital format clips of no longer than three minutes of video footage of the area around the Pier Head, which could be footage from this summer or from years ago.

Footage of the On the Waterfront events including the fantastic projections on the Royal Liver Building and the Museum of Liverpool, or of one of a number of cruise ships coming into port on the Mersey are just a couple of ideas for contributions.

The easiest way to contribute is to upload it to the project blog at: http://pierheadtimewarp.wordpress.com or you can bring your footage along on the day on a DVD or USB drive and Re-Dock will aim to include it in the project.

Please remember the Pier Head Time Warp can only use video footage if it belongs to you or you have permission to use it.
Contact Neil Winterburn at Re-Dock on 07528 316 230, neil@re-dock.org or via the website to discuss sharing your video footage.


Posted by Lucy | 10/10/2011 11:04   | Comments [0]

Posted in: museum of liverpool
Tagged with: community | film | get involved | liverpool | on the waterfront | video