Adam J Taylor

Postgraduate researcher in The School of Pharmacy at The University of Nottingham.

Vices include épée, wine, opera and Evensong.

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This is my personal site and as such may not represent the views of my institution or funding bodies.

One Week in Salzburg

Tim does a magnificent job attempting to describe the indescribable experience of Roche Continents. A task I failed at on my return twelve months ago. My own week in Salzburg broke me; melted me; cast me in a new mould, and sent me out afresh. It changed me more anything ever before. Such passion, energy and intensity! These are days we will long to experience again and again, and stories we will tell our grandchildren. These are people and memories that will be in your life forever. You will love them, grow with them. Cherish them.

(Can you tell that I miss it/them yet?)

(Source: timomorris)

  12:43 am  |   August 14 2011   |  3 notes  

Henry Moore at Tate Britain
until 8 August

Pictured: Mother and Child, 1924-25

A few words about this lovely retrospective. Before entering, I didn’t know Henry Moore beyond his iconic larger works - scattered across the landscape gardens and sculpture parks of my childhood memories - so this was a revealing education.

In chronological procession, across seven rooms, we wind through Moore’s working life.

His early work, such as the Mother and Child above, is wonderfully primitive - staring eyes, strong arms - and brings to the surface core, primal emotions that stay throughout the exhibition.


  “Some of those revelations of sculptural form that alter a man’s life have come to me in the dark, crowded corners of The British Museum.”


The forms become slowly softer and Moore’s base poses are fully realised - the reclining female figure, and the mother and child.


  “The fullness of form, the tautness of form, all these things are connected with life, and life is sex.”


Many of these representations have a dream like quality, and lead directly to the abstraction that enters his work in the 1930s. These erotic, sensual forms, occasionally sporting masons glyphs, are simultaneously familiar and alien.

We enter a period of deconstruction with the sculptural forms stripped back to their elemental forms. Many works draw our focus to the void rather than the solid parts - a hole in the heart or womb of the abstracted subject. This concept of the violated body returns in later works.

In a dark room the exhibition focuses on the bleak period of the Second World War, when Moore was an official war artist. The bleak, charcoal depictions of skeletal Londoners sheltering in the tube are rough and harrowing.


  “If one had to describe what hell might be like, this would be it.”
  
  “The only thing at all like those shelters that I could thing of was the hold of a slave ship.”


Post-war, Moore’s work becomes more animal and broken. Now the child is bawling, and turned against from their mother. Form is distorted. Not mutated but mutilated by fellow man. Reclining figures are no longer relaxed and languid, but forced to the ground in fear. The Warrior with Shield is typical - amputated and defenceless he awaits a coup de grâce.

In the final room we see several large reclining figures, this time from raw and open grained Dutch Elm. New languid life springs from the dead trees.

Overall a really well constructed and educational exhibition. Narrative in art is really important to me, and Henry Moore has it in spades.

(Sorry for the rambling. I’ve set myself a goal of posting some longer pieces, with the aim of improving my writing, a skill that I’ve never mastered.)

Henry Moore at Tate Britain
until 8 August

Pictured: Mother and Child, 1924-25

A few words about this lovely retrospective. Before entering, I didn’t know Henry Moore beyond his iconic larger works - scattered across the landscape gardens and sculpture parks of my childhood memories - so this was a revealing education.

In chronological procession, across seven rooms, we wind through Moore’s working life.

His early work, such as the Mother and Child above, is wonderfully primitive - staring eyes, strong arms - and brings to the surface core, primal emotions that stay throughout the exhibition.

“Some of those revelations of sculptural form that alter a man’s life have come to me in the dark, crowded corners of The British Museum.”

The forms become slowly softer and Moore’s base poses are fully realised - the reclining female figure, and the mother and child.

“The fullness of form, the tautness of form, all these things are connected with life, and life is sex.”

Many of these representations have a dream like quality, and lead directly to the abstraction that enters his work in the 1930s. These erotic, sensual forms, occasionally sporting masons glyphs, are simultaneously familiar and alien.

We enter a period of deconstruction with the sculptural forms stripped back to their elemental forms. Many works draw our focus to the void rather than the solid parts - a hole in the heart or womb of the abstracted subject. This concept of the violated body returns in later works.

In a dark room the exhibition focuses on the bleak period of the Second World War, when Moore was an official war artist. The bleak, charcoal depictions of skeletal Londoners sheltering in the tube are rough and harrowing.

“If one had to describe what hell might be like, this would be it.”

“The only thing at all like those shelters that I could thing of was the hold of a slave ship.”

Post-war, Moore’s work becomes more animal and broken. Now the child is bawling, and turned against from their mother. Form is distorted. Not mutated but mutilated by fellow man. Reclining figures are no longer relaxed and languid, but forced to the ground in fear. The Warrior with Shield is typical - amputated and defenceless he awaits a coup de grâce.

In the final room we see several large reclining figures, this time from raw and open grained Dutch Elm. New languid life springs from the dead trees.

Overall a really well constructed and educational exhibition. Narrative in art is really important to me, and Henry Moore has it in spades.

(Sorry for the rambling. I’ve set myself a goal of posting some longer pieces, with the aim of improving my writing, a skill that I’ve never mastered.)

  10:22 pm  |   June 26 2010   |  4 notes  

“You are joining a special profession. Doctors and scientists, we are all in the survival business, but we are also in the mortality business. Our successes will always be restricted by the limits of knowledge and human capability, by the inevitability of suffering and death. Meaning comes from each of us finding ways to help people and communities make the most of what is known and cope with what is not. This will take science. It will take art. It will take innovation. It will take ambition. And it will take humility. But the fantastic thing is: This is what you get to do.”

— Atul Gawande, speaking to the graduating class at Stanford’s School of Medicine (via haunted).

  11:44 pm  |   June 24 2010   |  4 notes  

Mick Ryan for The Art of Building photography competition, run by the Chartered Institute of Building. (via BBC News)

Mick Ryan for The Art of Building photography competition, run by the Chartered Institute of Building. (via BBC News)

  11:42 pm  |   June 23 2010   |  5 notes  

Venus and Mars
about 1485, Sandro Botticelli

Venus and Mars
about 1485, Sandro Botticelli

  8:26 pm  |   June 23 2010   |  1 note  

QR code as art by Matt McDonnell

QR code as art by Matt McDonnell

  11:09 am  |   May 31 2010  

Andrea del Verrocchio, Head of a woman. Charcoal, heightened with lead white, c. 1475. © The Trustees of the British Museum

Yesterday I had the pleasure of going to the new BM exhibition, Fra Angelico to Leonardo: Italian Renaissance Drawing. I’ve been disappointed by the BM’s recent blockbusters including The Terracotta Army, Hadrian and Moctezuma, so it was nice to see the wonderful dome of the Reading Room put to use for such an intimate exhibition. Wandering around the softly lit drawings gave a real insight into the depth of preparation that the great masters made.

Andrea del Verrocchio, Head of a woman. Charcoal, heightened with lead white, c. 1475. © The Trustees of the British Museum

Yesterday I had the pleasure of going to the new BM exhibition, Fra Angelico to Leonardo: Italian Renaissance Drawing. I’ve been disappointed by the BM’s recent blockbusters including The Terracotta Army, Hadrian and Moctezuma, so it was nice to see the wonderful dome of the Reading Room put to use for such an intimate exhibition. Wandering around the softly lit drawings gave a real insight into the depth of preparation that the great masters made.

  12:11 pm  |   May 11 2010  

Bill Viola and the making of Emergence (Mark Kidel, 2003)

  10:56 am  |   April 4 2010  

The Disrobing of Christ —  El Greco

The Disrobing of Christ — El Greco

  2:58 pm  |   April 1 2010  

12minds:

Henri Rousseau, Surprise! 1891

A personal favourite.

12minds:

Henri Rousseau, Surprise! 1891

A personal favourite.

  3:00 pm  |   March 4 2010  

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twentyten by Justin Waggoner