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Looking Back
Our highlights from 2014

It’s been a busy year at the Whitechapel Gallery. We can’t wait to start the New Year with a bang, with our Abstraction takeover from 15 January, but in the meantime here were some of our highlights from 2014.

 

 

Image credits clockwise from top left: (1) Hannah Hoch, Ohne Titel (Aus einem ethnographischen Museum) (Untitled [From an Ethnographic Museum]) (1930), Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe, Hamburg, Photo courtesy Maria Thrun. (2) Chris Marker, La Jetée (1962), Film still, Image courtesy BFI Stills Collection, © 1963 Argos Films (3) Installation view: Giulio Paolini: To Be Or Not To Be at Whitechapel Gallery (4) Richard Tuttle, Walking on Air, C3 (2009), Copyright the artist, Courtesy Stuart Shave Modern Art, London and Pace Gallery, New York

1 – The major exhibitions

We premiered Hannah Höch, queen of collage; fulfilled the dreams of Chris Marker aficionados by presenting his first major retrospective; had an existential summer with Giulio Paolini; and discovered the delights of fabric and poetry with Richard Tuttle.

 

 

3. WG. James Williamson_The Big Swallow_1901_LR

James Williamson, The Big Swallow (1901), Film Still, Image courtesy of BFI Stills

2 – Rarely seen collections

Collection displays in collaboration with the Contemporary Art Society revealed little known treasures from across Britain ranging from The Best is Not Too Good for You, a collection of pop art ceramics from the Midlands, to Twixt Two Worlds, featuring the unforgettable short film of a man swallowing a camera (and the camera man).

 

 

Image credits clockwise from top left: (1) Installation view: Kader Attia: Continuum of Repair: The Light of Jacob’s Ladder (2013) at Whitechapel Gallery, Photo: Stephen White. (2) Installation view: Whitechapel Gallery Children’s Commission, Francis Upritchard: Do What You Will (2014), Photo: Angus Mill. (3) Heather and Ivan Morison, Smile All the While (2014), Film still, Three channel video installation, Duration 25 minutes, Courtesy the artists.

3 – Brand new works

Kader Attia’s immersive library Continuum of Repair: The Light of Jacob’s Ladder and its visions of infinity filled Gallery 2 for the year. The annual Children’s Comission by Francis Upritchard saw prehistoric creatures placed on plinths around Galleries 5 & 6 in a pastel coloured installation and Heather and Ivan Morison’s video works guiding visitors through the education galleries looked at the relationship between making art, learning and play.

 

 

Waltz of the Machine Equestrians - Riders 11 ee

Image credit: Uudam Tran Nguyen, Waltz of the Machine Equestrians – The Machine Equestrians (2012), © The artist, Selected for Artists’ Film International by Hanoi/DOCLAB, Hanoi, Vietnam

4 – Films from around the globe

The Artists’ Film International programme, which showcases work selected by art institutions around the world, featured everything from Vietnamese artist Uudam Tran Nguyen’s choreographed masked scooter-riders to Turner Prize-winning artist Elizabeth Price’s eerie study of desire and consumption, AT THE HOUSE OF MR X.

 

 

Image credits: (1) Stephen Willats, Working Within A Defined Context 1978, Reproduced by kind permission of the Museum of London, © Stephen Willats. (2) Photograph of Jacob Epstein in studio with plaster model of ‘Dancing Girl’; commission for the British Medical Association Building, Strand and Agar Street, London, (c. 1907) Vintage print, © Tate Enterprises, Courtesy Leeds Museums & Galleries (Henry Moore Institute Archive)

5 – Archives

In the archive gallery we heard of the unrealised dreams of London council estate tenants interviewed by artist Stephen Willats and discovered the fate of six of the city’s public sculptures courtesy of the Henry Moore Institute’s archive of Sculptors’ Papers in Leeds.

 


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