Part I 1984 – 1987 – 6 June – 11 July 2025 – Opening reception and book launch Saturday 7 June 4 – 7pm
Part II 1988 – 1991
16 July – 13 September 2025 – (Opening reception Wednesday 16 July 6 – 8pm)
The title of the earliest painting in this exhibition Heart’s Ease, 1984, refers to the wild pansy flower popular during the Victorian era and thought to represent romantic love. The flower also, however, appears in Shakespeare’s A Midsummer’s Night’s Dream, where its magical aphrodisiac properties cause considerable mayhem. The same year Derek Jarman created this painting, he was working on one of his most beautiful films, The Angelic Conversation, 1985, a love story between two young men, which he shot using Super 8 film and video. The film opens with the sound of a clock ticking and the recitation of one of Shakespeare’s sonnets. Unfolding without recourse to a direct narrative, it uses a black and gold layering of moving imagery to seduce the audience.
This two-part presentation of Derek Jarman’s work traces the development of his Black Paintings, the most significant series of paintings that he produced up to 1991. The chronological thread reveals significant thematic, iconographic and textual parallels between the paintings and the films and writings he produced over the same period. That said, the interrelationship between these co-evolving bodies of works shows that Jarman’s creative approach is by no means linear. Motifs appear in the paintings that recall earlier moments in his career, such as his student theatre design of Lorca’s Blood Wedding. References to Middle English texts such as Piers the Ploughman coincide with searing commentary on the politics of 1980s Britain, as in his film The Last of England, 1987. A notable precedent to this approach is the opening scene of his feature film Jubilee, 1977, as Elizabeth I is transported to the future by the alchemist John Dee and finds herself amidst the punks and anarchists of 1970s London. Drawing on historical and literary references, personal history and contemporary politics, Jarman effectively created his own time machine from the mechanics of writing, painting and filmmaking.
The format of the small black paintings share something with Jarman’s black and gold square notebooks – recording memories, photographs and research for his latest projects. They weave together ideas and life experiences, experimenting with the trajectory of time. Similarly, the Black Paintings register the complexity of his thoughts while crystallising the extraordinary nature of Jarman’s multimedia oeuvre.
Opening reception and book launch Saturday 7 June 4 – 7pm
Extended opening hours :
Friday 6 June 11 am – 6pm
Saturday 7 June 11 am – 7pm
Sunday 8 June 11 am – 5pm
Duration | 06 June 2025 - 13 September 2025 |
Times | Wednesday - Friday 12 noon - 6pm and Saturday 12 noon - 5pm |
Cost | Free |
Venue | Amanda Wilkinson Gallery |
Address | 1st Floor, 47 Farringdon Road, , London, EC1M 3JB |
Contact | 442078310151 / info@amandawilkinsongallery.com / www.amandawilkinsongallery.com/ |