SUSPENSE
Twentieth-century and contemporary art from the Ulster Museum collection
This exhibition has now ended.
SUSPENSE | Twentieth-Century and Contemporary Art | Ulster Museum Collection
The Ulster Museum holds one of the most important collections of twentieth-century and contemporary art in the UK and Ireland. SUSPENSE contains some of its highlights arranged in three rooms to show the development of the collection.
To complement The Taking of Christ and The Supper at Emmaus, works are included that resonate with Caravaggio’s dramatic use of chiaroscuro (light and dark) and exploration of cinematic tension and suspense. Two films of importance are Segura, 2010 by Willie Doherty and Left Right and Centre, 2017 by Cornelia Parker. Both echo Caravaggio’s revolutionary achievements in painting during the early 1600s.
Room 1 The Arrival of Modernism, 1920s and 1930s
Following the First World War (1914-18), a new spirit of modernism emerged in painting, and many artists abandoned traditional methods of representation. In 1926, the Ulster Museum received a bequest of Victorian paintings from Sir Robert Lloyd Patterson. As plans developed for the opening of the Belfast Art Gallery and Museum in 1929, (now the Ulster Museum) it became clear the bequest did not represent the new developments in painting. A decision was made to sell the original bequest and buy the work of young British artists, while retaining the name Lloyd Patterson Collection.
Room 2 Post War Art, Light and Dark, 1950s and 1960s
The Ulster Museum’s Post war collection is of international importance and was formed during a relatively short period in the late 1950s and 1960. In the aftermath of the Second World War (1939-45), many painters explored new and revolutionary methods of artistic expression. A wide range of International movements emerged, some in response to the aftermath of war and the emerging tensions of the Cold War. In Germany, members of Group Zero sought to return artistic production to its most basic principles using raw wood, metal, and even burning the surface of the canvas.
Room 3 Post War Art, Colour and Light, 1950s to the Present
The Ulster Museum’s collection of Post war is of international importance and was formed during the late 1950s and 1960s when few museums outside London collected contemporary art. In the Post war period the energy, scale and reverence for colour characteristic of American abstract painting was the dominant global influence. During the 1950s, members of the Colour Field movement experimented with pouring acrylic paint directly onto unprimed canvas. Two of the most impressive paintings in the Post war collection, Golden Dawn 1958 by Morris Louis and Crystal 1959 by Kenneth Noland are examples of this technique.
What to know
This is a free exhibition taking place in Art Gallery 6, no booking needed.
Image credits
Lead Image: Willie Doherty, Segura
Body Image: Cornelia Parker Left Right and Centre (2017), Courtesy of the Artist and Firth Street Gallery
Films
Willie Doherty (Born 1959), Segura, 2010
High definition video and sound, duration 10 minutes, Commissioned by Manifesta 8, Murcia, Spain, European Biennale of Contemporary Art, 2010. Purchased 2017
Segura was filmed in Murcia, an arid region in southern Spain where water is a powerful symbol of power and ownership. The land was in the possession of the Moors for several centuries and the landscape still bears traces of their irrigation channels. The region is close to North Africa and attracts a transitory population who find places of habitation and refuge within the landscape. Doherty filmed Segura mainly at night, and his use of intense, saturated colours to depict the unsettling qualities of this semi-underworld resonates with Caravaggio’s dramatic use of light and dark in The Taking of Christ.
Cornelia Parker (Born 1956), Left Right and Centre, 2017
Video/Film Duration: 9 min 32 seconds, Purchased 2018 with Art Fund support
In 2017, the House of Commons commissioned Parker as official artist for the general election of that year. Parker filmed Left, Right and Centre in the chamber of the House of Commons in daylight and at night, using a drone and a wind machine to scatter the piles of newspapers subscribed to by the House of Commons. The 2017 election campaign was divisive and overshadowed by the upheavals of Brexit, and the work conveys a sense of this unease while also sending an ominous warning as the historic chamber is disrupted by a powerful wind suggesting malevolent invisible forces.