September brings a rush of shows as the ‘season opens’ – though mostly not yet, so there’s a mixture of ongoing pleasures and reliable previews in the following… starting with the painting above, which suggests a farewell to summer, and moving on to a preponderance of constructions, masking and deception. Among the many other shows opening in September and likely to prove interesting are Shannon Ebner and (in a new space) Ryan Sullivan at Sadie Coles, Uriel Orlow at Seventeen, ‘Lunar Sea’ at Transition, Sarah McKillop at the Mews Project Space (just 12-15 Sept), Hannah Knox at Ceri Hand, Hannah Maybank at Gimpel Fils, Sarah Anna Boghiguian and Goshka Macuga’s responses to Rabindranath Tagore at Iniva, Prem Sahib at Southard Reid, Lutz Bacher at the ICA, Tacita Dean at Frith Street, Steven Pippin at Dilston Grove, Andy Holden at Anita Zabludowicz, ‘2Q13: Women Collectors, Women Artists’ at Lloyd’s Club and ‘Long ago, and not true anyway’ at Waterside Contemporary.
21 Sept – 5 Oct: www.bowarts.org
This 19 artist extravaganza curated by Cullinan Richards in a charitable cause should prove lively. Certainly it contains a couple of bankers in Clare Mitten’s cheerfully clunky cardboard processings of the mechanical into the painterly geometries, which find a new way to give the impersonal a personality; and five large paintings by Aglaé Bassens – from the ‘outside’ range of her work, an odd sort of place which is visibly constructed out of props and paint, for all the yearning in its bodies of water. Bassens’ inside view of wigs as a transformative cipher is one of the best things in the patchy ‘paper’ show still on – until November! – at the Saatchi Gallery.
Marcius Galan: Geometric Progression @ White Cube, Bermondsey
Sao Paulo based Marcius Galan present works developed during a recent residency at Vauxhall’s Gasworks across three rooms of the big White Cube: the stand-out is ‘Three Sections’, which uses light to create an illusion of tilted panes of green glass, which had me prepared to bash my nose as I walked through, mindful of occasions when I’ve walked into the real thing! And Galan has plenty of other ideas: super-heavy would-be-mobiles; iron bunting origami; a logical progression of erasers wearing themselves out…
Alzbeta Jaresova: A Catalyst For Remembrance @ the Griffin Gallery, 21 Evesham St – Ladbroke Grove
Position X (detail) London-based Czech Alzbeta Jaresova won the 2012 Griffin Prize of a six month residency leading to this show at Winsor & Newton’s gallery. Her unusual combinations of drawing-based paintings and sculptural constructions show people set in – perhaps limited by – geometric-tending environments which prove to be the very constructions which she’s made. These positions in contrivances prove atmospheric and quietly authoritative means to provoke such questions as: how does memory operate in forming our personal identities? Is it analogous to how architecture builds up what’s distinctive about a city? Is a house the embodiment of our own disposition?
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Philip Guston: Gladiators, 1940
The views of this show have tended to emphasise the absence of the murals by Riviera, Orozco and Siqueiros which have come to define Mexico’s place in the story of modern art. However, this is a superb combination of historical atmosphere and of painters and photographers, both Mexican and visiting, feeding off the revolutionary fervour. Los Tres Grandes get a painting each, and Manuel Alvarez Bravo, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Tina Modotti, Edward Burra, Marsden Hartley and Josef Albers are among the highlights. Guston, too, made a mural in Mexico, and it’s great to see a darkly humorous and turbulent early painting in which children with their faces hidden beneath improvised hats seem to be fighting a mock battle with the aim of unmasking each other.
The Masks We Wear @ ArtEco Gallery, 533 Old York Road, Wandsworth
6 Sept – 5 Oct: www.artecogallery.com
Rachel Bullock: Morand Lesovii
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To 28 Sept: www.blainsouthern.com
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Curved Rising Lines, Jebel-Acacus , SW Libya
You might say that Skye-based Julie Brook’s twenty year career combines Richard Long’s empathetic sculptural working of the landscape with Carl Andre’s emphasis on the particularity of materials. She makes the most of Wapping’s unusually large spaces to show meditatively absorbing sequences of short films from the Libyan and Namibian deserts. One distinctive achievement is to combine man-made and natural, in both performance and outcomes, in such a way that the boundaries are blurred: scuffed lines and lava ridges; measured arrangements and blown sand; found boulders and imposed geometries – all feel of a piece. Where, I found myself wondering, does the human world end and the wilderness begin?
11 Sept – 8 Oct: www.alancristea.com 19 Sept – 12 Jan www.courtauld.ac.uk
Top Photo: Aglaé Bassens: ‘Painting with a View’ from the Bow Arts Open
Images courtesy if the relevant galleries and artists + Photo – FXP Photography (Serra) + Peter Mallet (Zorio)








