Friday, 27 June 2014

Henry IV Pt. 2

**1/2 Part II has never been one of my favourite plays and on this occasion the starkness of both plot and set proved too much. There is to my mind, too much comedy in this history too far; the runt of the tetralogy methinks. Sher was again a worthy Falstaff of which Elizabeth would certainly have approved. Shallow is well performed but Silence is just plain irritating. The motley crew of conscripts do however amuse but Pistol is too wild and extreme a figure; alone he is striking, but in this production he is simply incongruous.

Wednesday, 25 June 2014

Henry IV Pt. 1

**** When Bollingbrook first takes the stage, mourning the death of Richard, David Tennant appears again as Richard II on the balcony...or we think it's Tennant and gasp with excitement. There are times when the play doesn't quite hit the mark (Hal's Machiavellian monologue for example) but otherwise it was a joy to watch. Hotspur is wonderfully petulant and the puppet of Worcester and his father but it is Sher of course who steals the show, revelling in Falstaff's comedy. Can't wait for Pt.2 now.

Sunday, 8 June 2014

Abstraction at the Albert Dock

At the Tate in Liverpool Mondrian and Nasreen Mohamedi share the top floor gallery which, on the face of things, seems an odd pairing, yet in reality works well. Whilst everyone knows (and perhaps even appreciates) Piet's ordered grids of black and primary coloured neo-plasticism, it is the early deconstructions such as the Church Facade No.6 of 1915 and The Tree A of 1913 that I prefer. The latter also has a wonderful sense of Cezanne.


Mohamedi's work is however new to me. Early works are reminiscent of monochromatic Ivon Hitchens paintings, later developing into a complex form of Op Art which rivals even Riley. Again an odd combination one might think but Mohamedi's evolution as an artist seems wholly logical. There is even a reconstruction of Mondrian's studio to see but sadly, this didn't make me immediately wish to paint.

The 'DLA Piper Series: Constellations' exhibition which is also showing, assembles a typical selection of 'is that really art?' work. Stacks of magazines, colourful trollies, a pile of old towels, women being tattooed, and best of all John Smith's video from 1976, The Girl Chewing Gum. Containing elements of Pete and Dud and slightly Monty Pythonesque, I really like this piece, but probably for the wrong reasons.

Sunday, 1 June 2014

Sunny Manchester?

Just my luck...what was a glorious sunny Sunday outside the Central Lending Library disappears as soon as my watercolour touches the paper.