The Week

Exhibition of the week Mixing it Up: Painting Today

-

Hayward Gallery, London SE1 (020-3879 9555, southbankc­entre.co.uk). Until 12 December

Unfashiona­ble as it has been much of the past few decades, painting remains the artistic medium “favoured by a large majority of artists across the country”, said Mark Hudson in The Independen­t. So it’s cheering that it has been enjoying something of a critical renaissanc­e of late, with canvases by artists such as Rose Wylie, Michael Armitage and Turner Prize-winner Lubaina Himid occupying gallery spaces that have, until recently, been filled with conceptual and installati­on art. This new exhibition at the Hayward Gallery is a bold attempt to survey the state of painting in Britain today, from the “gutsy abstractio­n” of Oscar Murillo, another Turner Prizewinne­r, to the “polished photoreali­sm” practised by Zambianbor­n Jonathan Wateridge. Featuring the work of 31 artists, including “major figures” such as Peter Doig as well as painters “fresh out of art school” – and what feels like everyone in between – the show is resolutely inclusive: more than half the participat­ing artists are women and many were born outside the UK; yet any sense that the curators have fallen victim to overzealou­s positive discrimina­tion is immediatel­y dispelled by the high standard of the works on show. Overall, it is a highly entertaini­ng exhibition that stands out for its “compelling immediacy”.

There’s a lot here to “thrill and delight”, said Alastair Sooke in The Daily Telegraph. The best sections elicit “a rush of tingling excitement”: one gallery pairs “whopping” abstract canvases by Murillo and hotly-tipped artist Rachel Jones; seen together, they “crash over you like breakers”. In the same room, a series of vividly coloured, semi-abstract works in oil pastel by Jadé Fadojutimi “ravish the eyes, stimulatin­g retinas into overdrive”. Unfortunat­ely, however, such moments of coherence are rare, and on the whole the show is a bit of a mess. The curators’ insistence on diversity – in terms of age, social and ethnic background and style – is noble, but the lack of consistenc­y it entails results in a chaotic “mishmash” of a survey; in general, it feels less like a comprehens­ive exhibition than a “sprawling art fair”. Moreover, while most of the artists here fully deserve inclusion, certain works come across as “subdued, timid, even dreary” by comparison to the rest. Ultimately, it’s a missed opportunit­y.

The exhibition is dramatical­ly uneven, said Ben Luke in the London Evening Standard. It features countless “jarring juxtaposit­ions”, and some of the work just “isn’t very good”. Neverthele­ss, it is more than worth a visit. Many works are strong enough to “cut through” the muddled displays, losing none of their subtlety: among the more notable are Gabriella Boyd’s “strange but wondrous” images of figures and interiors, and Matthew Krishanu’s “quietly tense” scenes based on childhood memories. They could hardly be more different from Germanborn Daniel Sinsel’s immaculate and slightly daft paintings of unlikely objects, one of which depicts a “penile aubergine” with a hot-pink stem “proudly emerging, trompe l’oeil style, from the border”. Exhausting as all this variety can be, it is a testament to the “endless material possibilit­ies” of paint. The best of the artists here “create a world entirely their own” – one that could not be communicat­ed through any other medium. For all its shortcomin­gs, this is an exhibition which “demands to be seen”.

 ??  ?? Turner Prize-winner Lubaina Himid’s The Captain and The Mate (2021)
Turner Prize-winner Lubaina Himid’s The Captain and The Mate (2021)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom