1. Futurism

    Title: Futurism
    Location: Tate Modern
    Date: 2009-06-12

    Futurism was an art movement launched by the Italian poet Filippo Tommaso Marinetti in 1909. On 20 February he published his Manifesto of Futurism on the front page of the Paris newspaper Le Figaro. That moment saw the birth of the Futurists, a small group of radical Italian artists working just before the outbreak of World War 1.

    Among modernist movements, the Futurists rejected anything old and looked towards a new Italy. This was partly because the weight of past culture in Italy was felt as particularly oppressive. In his Manifesto, Marinetti asserted ‘we will free Italy from her innumerable museums which cover her like countless cemeteries.’

    What the Futurists proposed instead was an art that celebrated the modern world of industry and technology: ‘We declare … a new beauty, the beauty of speed. A racing motor car … is more beautiful than the Victory of Samothrace’ (the celebrated ancient Greek sculpture in the Louvre museum in Paris). From an original blend of elements of Neo-Impressionism and Cubism, the Futurists created a new style that expressed the idea of the dynamism, energy and movement of modern life. The chief artists were Giacomo Balla, Umberto Boccioni, Carlo Carrà, Gino Severini and Luigi Russolo.

    Tate Modern celebrates the centenary of this dramatic art movement with a ground-breaking exhibition. Here you’ll see the work of the Futurists accompanied by rooms looking at art movements reacting to Futurism, including Cubism, the British art movement Vorticism, and Russian Cubo-Futurism.

    Highlights include Boccioni’s dynamic bronze sculpture of a man which seems to leap through thin air, Picasso’s Head of a Woman, Nevinson’s Vorticist masterpiece Bursting Shell, and works by major artists such as Braque, Leger, Malevich, and Duchamp.

    on till 20 September 2009.


  2. History Repeats Itself

    Title: History Repeats Itself
    Location: Brick Lane Gallery London
    Description: Exhibition by the Winchester School of Art Graphics Programme
    Start Time: 14:00
    Date: 2009-05-30

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    30 May 2 — 6pm

    A Shared History of Play
    Marie O’Connor & Peter Nencini

    A Short History of Design Publishing — some books from Hyphen Press
    Roland Früh

    A History of Some Self-Initiated Work in Graphic Design
    James Goggin, Practise

    A Future History of the Book
    Sarah Gottlieb

    Seriously Forks #4: History Repeats like a Rehearsal for a Show we are not Meant to Do
    åbäke


  3. CHE: PART TWO

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    Title:
    CHE: PART TWO
    Location: Rio Cinema (Friday 20 February for 1 week)
    Description: Benicio Del Toro masterfully reprises his role as revolutionary Guevara in this, the darker half of Soderbergh’s superb biopic. Following the Cuban Revolution, Che disappears at the height of his fame and power, re-emerging in Bolivia as he attempts to bring his ideas of freedom to the rest of Latin America. But unable to drum up the levels of support that led to success in Cuba the attempt fails, bringing forth Che’s downfall. This is a much more painful tale of determination and sacrifice, bringing Che’s story and life to a close but offering an understanding of his legacy, and why he became, and remains, a symbol of idealism to millions around the world.
    Date: 2009-02-20