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Ever Since I Put Your Picture In A Frame

An exhibition curated by Merlin James reflecting on how contemporary art becomes the art of the past. Featured contemporary artists include James Hyde, Louise Hopkins, Clive Hodgson and Richard Walker, among others, while featured historical artists include Serge Charchoune and André Derain. Part of Glasgow International Festival of Visual Art.

Ever Since I Put Your Picture In A Frame

This inaugural exhibition at 42 Carlton Place (Carol Rhodes & Merlin James) mixes contemporary paintings with ones from different periods, ranging back through the 20th century. Juxtaposing artists of different degrees of fame and recognition, and including some anonymous works, the exhibition features a single painting by each artist and builds to a kind of anti-manifesto; an exploratory and partial working definition of painting as an art form.

In part it reflects on how contemporary art becomes the art of the past, while past art remains present, though changed. A notion of genre is also central, many of the works playing with recognised painting categories and conventions, asking to what extent all art – even all human activity and experience – is genre-defined and ‘framed’.

Artists include:

James Castle (1899-1977)

Serge Charchoune (1888-1975)
André Derain (1880-1954)
Rodney Harder
James Hyde

Louise Hopkins
Clive Hodgson

Paul Housley
James Dickson Innes (1887-1914)
Alex Katz
Stephen McKenna

James Pryde (1866-1941)
Julie Roberts
Walter Sickert (1860-1942)

David Schutter
Tony Swain

Joel Tomlin
Richard Walker
Alfred Wallis (1855-1942)

42 Carlton Place is a new exhibition space run by Carol Rhodes and Merlin James.

Text supplied by third party.

We don't have details of any future performances, if you know of some please let us know.

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