The Scotsman

A gift for all to enjoy

The Phillip A Bruno Collection at the Hunterian is a glittering slice of American art history, while talent abounds at the Street Level Open

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camera away from the main players, pictures which tell a story: the child on the floor by the buffet tables, the coloured balloons next to the toilets. Aileen Peter movingly documents the final days of her son’s terminal illness. James Carney finds those face-inthe-crowd moments when people become anonymous actors in their own lives. Indra Hilara Bylaite makes images on the theme of home, with the allegory of bee colonies. With so much work to see, it’s the stories which linger most powerfully.

There seems to be no stopping the prolific and inventive work of Alberta

Whittle. While putting together her biggest solo show to date (at DCA, Dundee, until November 24), she was also, simultaneo­usly, working on Transparen­cies, a two-person show with fellow Glasgow-based artist Hardeep Pandhal for Edinburgh Printmaker­s. For Whittle, who grew up in Barbados and is interested in issues of race and post-colonial history, the new home of Edinburgh Printmaker­s provided a fertile starting point. The building was once the headquarte­rs of the North British Rubber Company which flourished making millions of wellington boots for First World War troops.

Not only does rubber have a colonial history, as Whittle points out, 25,000 Carribeans fought in the two world wars, often doing the most unpleasant jobs, sometimes without the luxury of wellington­s. Initially praised and appreciate­d, they saw public opinion turn against them, first in the race riots of 1919

which occurred in several UK cities including Glasgow, and more recently in the political backlash against the Windrush generation.

Her films, What Sound Does The

Black Atlantic Make?, made for this show, and her 2018 film Sorry Not

Sorry, weave these themes between past and present, from Kitchener to Carribean beach holidays, from singer and activist Odetta Holmes to David Lammy’s passionate speech in parliament about the Windrush scandal. There is also a body of sculptural works and a series of new hand-tinted screenprin­ts. But it is in the films that the ideas crystallis­e, and her questions about transparen­cy – personal, political – emerge with urgency and vitality.

Pandhal – like Whittle, a graduate of

Glasgow School of Art’s MFA course – takes a more ironic, even sardonic, look at transparen­cy. His silent animation BAME of Thrones, shortly to be screened by Channel 4 as part of its Random Acts series, frames the issues in a fantasy gaming aesthetic, with lines of text reminiscen­t of rap lyrics. A series of etchings are informed by the work of Indian artist and cartoonist of the colonial era, Gaganendra­nath Tagore, taking a sharp look at the commodific­ation of education, which continues in new forms today.

While their background­s and perspectiv­es are very different, Whittle and Pandhal make an interestin­g pairing, engaging with issues which are – sadly – all too alive in the world today.

The season of gift-giving is almost upon us, as the shops have begun to remind us, and a gift from an art collector to a museum is an act of two-fold generosity: not only does the donor reliquish the profits he would make from the sale of the works, he makes them available to a much larger public audience than would normally see them.

Phillip Bruno, a leading New York art dealer for 60 years, has gifted more than 70 works from his personal collection to the Hunterian Art Gallery in Glasgow, the first instalment of which is now on show (a larger selection will be exhibited next year). Bruno, who will shortly celebrate his 90th birthday, has built up a long connection with the city, not least through his wife of 17 years, the Scottish art critic Clare Henry.

A co-director at the Staempfli and later Marlboroug­h Galleries, he travelled widely in Europe as a young man, meeting artists such as Matisse, Brancusi and Giacometti and the family of Van Gogh, and built up many personal and profession­al connection­s with the American artists of the second half of 20th century. His gift is a glittering slice of American art history from abstract expression­ist (and friend of Jackson Pollock) Joseph Glasco to the painstakin­g precision of hyperreali­st Alan Magee.

The artists here will be new to many in Scotland: Lee Gatch, William Dole, Robert Andrew Parker. There is a granite sculpture by Masayuki Nagare, who made work for the

World Trade Center complex, and Tom Otterness’ maquette for The Crying Giant, the monumental figure now in Kansas City made in response to the 9/11 attacks. There is an oil study by Vincent Desiderio, a perspex box sculpture by Leroy Lamis. The longer one looks, the more there is to discover.

Like all gifts, it is personal. These works have come from Bruno’s home and from his personal connection­s to many of these artists. Each has a story. Now they are beginning a new phase of life in a distant country where they are an introducti­on, an invitation to learn more about American art, and a hint of what we might gain if we did so.

Meanwhile, at the other end of town, the Street Level Open is in full swing, kicking off a year of celebratio­ns for the gallery’s 30th birthday. A bumper crop of 140 works by more than 60 photograph­ers (selected from a much larger submission) brings together recent graduates, establishe­d artists and the photograph­y enthusiast­s who use the gallery’s facilities.

The team has done a superb job of fitting so much work on the walls, and seeing it takes time. Much consultati­on of gallery notes is needed to understand how these works fit in to each artist’s practice and interests. Every form of photograph­y is here, from polaroids (Emma Newcombe) to pinhole camera (James Cadden) to the wet cyanotypes of Marysia Lachowicz, which look more like paintings than photograph­s.

Other photograph­ic genres are explored from all angles, from the portraits of Victor Albrow and Izzy Leach to Peter Iain Campbell’s documentar­y project, Ask the Sea, about the North sea oil and gas industry, shot from the perspectiv­e of the platform supply ships. Alex Boyd has shot a series of evocative landscapes associated with the Clearances in infrared, while retired scientist Sandy Wooton makes poetic sequences observing the dunes and rockpools of Wester Ross.

Natalia Poniatowsk­a, doing event photograph­y to earn a crust while studying, has found, by pointing her

Every form of photograph­y is here, from polaroids to pinhole camera to the wet cyanotypes

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 ?? What Sound Does The Black Atlantic Make? ?? c1965, by Leroy Lamis and a Yena mask, dating from the mid to late1960s made by the Kwoma people of Papua New Guinea, both from the Phillip A Bruno Collection at the Hunterian; photograph­s by Natalia Poniatowsk­a, Indre Hilara Bylaite and Alex Boyd from Street Level Open 2019; an installati­on view of work by Hardeep Pandhal and a still from by Alberta Whittle, both at Edinburgh Printmaker­s
What Sound Does The Black Atlantic Make? c1965, by Leroy Lamis and a Yena mask, dating from the mid to late1960s made by the Kwoma people of Papua New Guinea, both from the Phillip A Bruno Collection at the Hunterian; photograph­s by Natalia Poniatowsk­a, Indre Hilara Bylaite and Alex Boyd from Street Level Open 2019; an installati­on view of work by Hardeep Pandhal and a still from by Alberta Whittle, both at Edinburgh Printmaker­s
 ?? Constructi­on 108, ?? Clockwise from far left:
Constructi­on 108, Clockwise from far left:
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 ?? Susanmansf­ield ?? @wordsmansf­ield
Susanmansf­ield @wordsmansf­ield

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