<h2>GOLNAZ FATHI<br>
NO RAIN WILL PUT OUT THIS FIRE<br>
27 April – 10 June, 2023</h2><h2>EL ANATSUI TO BE NEXT HYUNDAI COMMISSION ARTIST<br>FOR TATE MODERN’S TURBINE HALL</h2><h2>GOLNAZ FATHI:<br>NO RAIN WILL PUT OUT THIS FIRE - CATALOGUE</h2>Now Available From Our Store (£10 + P&P)<h2>AUBREY WILLIAMS: FUTURE CONSCIOUS<br>
15 June - 29 July, 2023</h2><h2>GOLNAZ FATHI<br>
NO RAIN WILL PUT OUT THIS FIRE<br>
27 April – 10 June, 2023</h2><h2>EDDY KAMUANGA ILLUNGA<br>Available from our Book Store, £60 + P&P</h2>248 pages, 200 full colour plates throughout. Published by Rizzoli.<h2>DREAM NO SMALL DREAM: The Story of October Gallery<br>Available from our Book Store, £40 + P&P</h2>304 pages, full colour plates throughout. Edited by Gerard Houghton.
 

CURRENT EXHIBITION

27 April – 10 June, 2023
Golnaz Fathi,
When the rain comes we can be thankful, 2021.
Acrylic on canvas, 170 x 130 cm.
Golnaz Fathi, Sunset, 2021.
Acrylic on canvas, 130 x 170 cm.
No rain will put out this fire is a new solo exhibition of boldly gestural paintings, layered with meaning, by the renowned Iranian artist, Golnaz Fathi.

Golnaz Fathi is an influential member of an invigorating group of contemporary artists that has come to prominence in Iran over the last two decades. Fathi is further distinguished in being one of only a handful of women trained to the highest levels within the traditional school of Persian calligraphy. While fully aware of the dramatic potential of calligraphic forms and honoured to have been selected by the exclusive assembly of traditional calligraphers, Fathi made the conscious decision to pursue a career as a contemporary artist instead. True to her instincts, she has followed a rigorous impulse towards abstraction, even as it has carried her beyond the boundaries of conventional scripts. Her startling combination of a traditionally trained, calligraphic refinement and an instinctively modernist abstraction is particularly marked in this new series.

Many of Fathi’s latest works on canvas show script that has been painted over or deliberately erased by superimposed layers. While exact transmission depends upon the legibility of any particular text, here the sheer accumulation of overwritten lines obliterates any possibility of straightforward interpretation. These blocks of proto-script are, in fact, deliberate abstractions incapable of being parsed or otherwise understood. They challenge each viewer to intuit or discover entirely new levels of significance for themselves.

To these blocks of black script on white background Fathi adds bright swatches of primary hues, creating vibrant contrasts that reference intense personal feelings about life and the complex interrelationships that link peoples and places. Red, always a strident marker of life and vitality, confronts various blues—perhaps signifying water and hope—shot through with its complementary of bright, chrome yellow, suggestive both of warmth and the raging heat of the sun. In keeping with the total lack of legible signs, these inscrutable colour combinations operate as subliminal hints, sounding powerful chords that resonate beyond the limits of ordinary language. Eluding the usual channels of transmission and exchange, Fathi’s canvases require that viewers sense their way slowly forwards, using their feelings, intuitions and emotions to unlock the eloquent yet unwritten discourse of her canvases.

 

FORTHCOMING EXHIBITION

15 June – 29 July, 2023
Aubrey Williams, May Day, 1962.
Oil on canvas, 64.5 x 75 cm.
Aubrey Williams, Towakaima, 1967.
Gouache on paper, 56 x 73 cm.
October Gallery presents Future Conscious, a solo exhibition comprising a selection of recently rediscovered paintings and works on paper by Aubrey Williams. The exhibition spans three decades — from the 1960s to the 1980s — and highlights Williams’ prescient understanding of, and concerns regarding, the mounting problems impacting environmental and ecological stability.

Williams, a visionary painter, often cited as being ahead of his time, trained as an Agricultural Officer in Guyana in the early 1940s. Williams was finely attuned to the complexities of these interactive systems in ways that anticipated, by decades, our own recent awakening to the urgency and seriousness of the environmental crises now looming over humanity.

Williams’ work can be viewed as a uniquely evolved expression of abstraction and as a powerful contribution to a post-war artistic sensibility. The works exhibited in Future Conscious show a striking and comprehensive use of colour, with a complex blend of abstraction and petroglyphic iconography.

There has recently been a major renewal of interest in Williams’ work as shown by his increasing prominence in significant international survey exhibitions, such as the seminal Fragments of Epic Memory at the Art Gallery of Ontario and Postwar Modern: New Art in Britain 1945–1965 at the Barbican, London, a timely reassessment of an artist whose distinctive body of work has frequently defied mainstream art conventions. Life Between Islands: Caribbean-British Art 1950s – Now at Tate Britain (2021–2022) positioned Williams’ work as a critical point of focus for the exhibition, juxtaposing seminal canvases alongside less familiar paintings. In another major exhibition, The Earth Will Open Its Mouth, Williams’ work was used as a revelatory counterweight, providing contrast and context alongside pieces by the surrealist, impressionist artist Erna Rosenstein at Museum Sztuki in Lodz, Poland.
 

 

NEWS, EVENTS & RECOMMENDATIONS


EL ANATSUI TO BE NEXT HYUNDAI COMMISSION ARTIST FOR TATE MODERN’S TURBINE HALL
10 October 2023 - 14 April 2024
We are thrilled that Tate Modern and Hyundai Motor have announced that El Anatsui will create the next annual Hyundai Commission. One of the most distinctive artists working today, El Anatsui is best-known for his cascading metallic sculptures constructed of thousands of recycled bottle-tops articulated with copper wire. Repurposing found materials into dazzling works of abstract art, Anatsui’s work explores themes that include the environment, consumption and trade. His site-specific work for the Turbine Hall will be open to the public from 10 October 2023 – 14 April 2024.

Frances Morris, Director of Tate Modern, said: “El Anatsui is responsible for some of the most unique and unforgettable sculptures in recent times and we are delighted that he will tackle the Turbine Hall this autumn for the annual Hyundai Commission. Anatsui’s much-loved Ink Splash II 2012 in Tate’s collection enchants visitors wherever it’s shown, and we can’t wait to see how this inventive artist will approach a space like the Turbine Hall.”
El Anatsui
Photo © Aliona Adrianova, 2019.
ROMUALD HAZOUMÈ: 1.5 Degrees: Interdependencies between Life, the Cosmos, and Technology
7 April – 8 October, 2023
Kunsthalle Mannheim
Romuald Hazoumè's monumental installation, Rat Singer: Second Only to God! will be exhibited in a bold, new exhibition at Kunsthalle Mannheim.

1.5 Degrees: Interdependencies between Life, the Cosmos, and Technology examines the complex interaction of human beings, nature and technology. Exploring how the climate crisis influences all areas of life, the premise of the exhibition questions whether the methods by which humankind has developed the world since the beginning of industrialisation are still legitimate. Includes works by Anselm Kiefer, Richard Long and Julian Charrière amongst others.
Romuald Hazoumè, Rat Singer: Second Only to God!, 2013. Mixed Media, 400 x 600 x 600 cm. Installation view, 5 Howick Place, London.
Photo © Jonathan Greet
James Barnor: Accra/London
—A Retrospective
28 May – 15 October 2023
Detroit Institute of Arts
The Detroit Institute of Arts will present James Barnor: Accra/London—A Retrospective, a comprehensive survey of the work of British-Ghanaian photographer James Barnor, whose career spans more than six decades. A studio portraitist, photojournalist, and Black lifestyle photographer, Barnor established his famous Ever Young Studio in Accra in the early 1950s and devoted his early photography to documenting critical social and political changes that animated the nation on the cusp of independence from Britain.
James Barnor , Model with Tank and Driver, 1974.
Digital Fibre Print, 70 x 70 cm
GOLNAZ FATHI:
No rain will put out this fire
Catalogue now available in our online store
36 page soft Cover
£10 (+ P&P)
Exhibition catalogue to accompany our current exhibition. Colour plates throughout.
OCTOBER GALLERY CAFE
Tuesday – Friday, 12:30 pm – 2:30 pm
Our Gallery Café serves home-cooked dishes during lunch hours, ready to be enjoyed in the Refectory or in the beautiful space of the courtyard garden.

Chef Amy has cooked internationally for three decades and has mastered many cuisines. The varied daily menu attests to this. It's her exceptional self-education in Asian cuisine, however, that led to her signature dish: the Malaysian Laksa Noodle soup. It’s on the menu every Tuesday.

Amy's daily lunch menu features a soup of the day and two dishes of the day (one always vegan) and changes regularly. Fresh pastries and cakes can also be purchased as well as coffee, teas, soft drinks, wines and beers. Booking is required for groups of five or more guest

 

VISTING OCTOBER GALLERY

Bloomsbury, London

October Gallery has been instrumental in bringing to worldwide attention many of the world’s leading international artists, including El Anatsui, Rachid Koraïchi, Romuald Hazoumè, Nnenna Okore, Laila Shawa and Kenji Yoshida. The Gallery promotes the Transvangarde, the very best in contemporary art from around the planet, as well as maintaining a cultural hub in central London for poets, writers, intellectuals and artists, and hosts talks, performances and seminars, see www.octobergallery.co.uk/events

The rich diversity of art presented is an inspiration to collectors and enthusiasts. Institutions such as the British Museum, London; the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Centre Pompidou, Paris; Museum Kunstpalast, Düsseldorf, Germany; Neue Galerie, Kassel, Germany; Setagagya Art Museum, Tokyo, Japan have all collected works from October Gallery.

Founded in 1979, October Gallery is a charitable trust which is supported by sales of art, rental of the Gallery's unique facilities, grants from various funding bodies and the active support of dedicated artists, musicians, writers and many friends from around the world. The Gallery’s Education Department is inclusive of all ages from under 5’s to PGCE student and delivers a wide range of provision, see www.octobergalleryeducation.com

October Gallery is open from 12:30 to 17:30 pm, Tuesday to Saturday.
The Gallery is closed during official holidays and the entire month of August.



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