14 May 2010Agnes Martin at Kettle's Yard
AGNES MARTIN at KETTLE’S YARD, Cambridge Kettle’s Yard’s collaboration with ARTIST ROOMS opens on Saturday 15 May bringing together the largest group of paintings by the American painter Agnes Martin (1912-2004) to be seen in the UK for over 15 years. Following the success of 2009, 21 museums and galleries across the UK in 2010 will be showing 25 ARTIST ROOMS exhibitions and displays from the collection created by the curator and collector, Anthony d’Offay, and acquired by the nation in February 2008. ARTIST ROOMS on Tour with The Art Fund has been devised to enable this collection held by Tate and the National Galleries of Scotland, to reach and inspire new audiences across the country, particularly young people. The exhibition includes the recently created Artist Room of works by Agnes Martin, together with additional loans from a private collection. The paintings date from 1991-2002, and highlight the scope of Martin’s late practice, which embraced an increasingly tactile handling of paint and broader range of hues. During this period, the artist also reintroduced titles to a number of works to convey emotional states of euphoria and memories of past happiness. In contrast to the large grid-based works made during the 1960’s, these later works are slightly smaller in scale and composed of horizontal bands of luminous colour that marry the harmony of ordered geometry with the imperfections and irregularity of hand-drawn pencil lines. The artist regarded this inherent inconsistency as a metaphor for the human condition. She has written: “I hope I have made it clear that the work is about perfection as we are aware of it in our minds but that the paintings are very far from being perfect – completely removed in fact – even as we ourselves are.” Martin’s pure, abstract style was often aligned with Minimalism, although the artist refuted this, maintaining that her concern was with the inner, emotional world – which explains her kinship with Abstract Expressionism. For most of her career, Martin worked in isolation, inspired by her reading of ancient Chinese Tao philosophy and by the bare desert landscapes in New Mexico where she resided from 1967 until her death in 2004. “I want people, when they look at my paintings, to have the same feelings they experience when they look at landscape,” Martin once said. Kettle’s Yard, with its intimate galleries filled with natural light, will be a unique place to experience at first hand the ethereal beauty of Martin’s paintings. The exhibition will also include rarely seen film interviews with the artist, and a To find out more information about ARTIST ROOMS on Tour please visit
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