Yayoi Kusama, Victoria Miro Gallery

Victoria Miro is delighted to announce a new exhibition by Yayoi Kusama. Spanning the gallery’s three locations and waterside garden, the exhibition features new paintings, pumpkin sculptures, and mirror rooms, all made especially for this presentation. This is the artist’s most extensive exhibition at the gallery to date, and it is the first time mirror rooms have gone on view in London since Kusama’s major retrospective at Tate Modern in 2012.

Yayoi Kusama pumpkins

Yayoi Kusama’s lifelong exploration of the self’s relationship to the infinite cosmos has given rise to a highly influential career in which she has continuously innovated and re-invented her style. For the exhibition at the Wharf Road galleries, she has created three mirror rooms:Pumpkin’s Infinity Mirrored Room, Chandelier of Grief and Where the Lights in My Heart Go, all of which place the viewer within a universe of varying proliferating reflections.

Yayoi Kusama

New paintings displayed alongside these immersive rooms continue an enduring preoccupation with multiplying polka dots and dense scalloped ‘infinity net’ patterns – Kusama’s obsessive repetition of these forms on canvas, which she has described as a form of active self-obliteration, responds to hallucinations first experienced in childhood. The pumpkin, another motif that she has returned to throughout her career, is also present in the form of new polished mirror sculptures.

Victoria Miro Mayfair will present new paintings from the important ongoing series My Eternal Soul, which Kusama first began in 2009. Each is a flatly painted monochrome field that abounds with imagery including eyes, faces in profile, and other more indeterminate forms, often in pulsating combinations of colour. Joyfully improvisatory, fluid and highly instinctual, they testify to the indefatigable, paradoxical drive to expression that has unified Kusama’s constantly evolving oeuvre over seven decades.

Yayoi Kusama

Yayoi Kusama has developed a practice which, though it shares affiliations with Surrealism, Minimalism, Pop art, the Zero and Nul movements, Eccentric Abstraction and Feminist art, resists any singular classification. Born in Matsumoto City, Japan in 1929, she studied painting in Kyoto before moving to New York in the late 1950s, and by the mid-1960s had become well known in the avant-garde world for her provocative happenings and exhibitions. Since this time, Kusama’s extraordinary artistic endeavours have spanned painting, drawing, collage, sculpture, performance, film, printmaking, installation, and environmental art as well as literature, fashion (most notably in her 2012 collaboration with Louis Vuitton), and product design.

Yayoi Kusama

Yayoi Kusama was recently named the world’s most popular artist by various news outlets, based on figures reported by The Art Newspaper for global museum attendance. Her exhibitions were consistently the most visited worldwide last year, with three museum tours simultaneously traveling through Asia, Central and South America and Scandinavia all drawing record-breaking attendances.

More information here: www.victoria-miro.com

Latitude Festival 2016, Preview

Latitude has always been one of my favourite summer festivals. Now in its 11th year, Latitude Festival is showing no signs of slowing down with an exciting summer line up of music, comedy and arts events to thrill and inspire creative festival-goers. This year’s event takes place from Thursday 14th to Sunday 17th July 2016 in the idyllic grounds of Henham Park, Suffolk.

Latitude FestivalLatitude FestivalLatitude Festival

The weekend will showcase and celebrate some of the biggest names in the performing arts world, from comedians to poets, bands to cabaret. Unlike some other festivals, Latitude manages to cater to all ages, with acts to suit every generation. This year, headliners include The Maccabees and New Order while talented artists like Beirut and Chet Faker will be taking some of the early evening slots. Needless to say there is a real range of genres and styles on offer, so whether you want to sunbathe on the grass or dance around like crazy, there will be plenty to please.

The comedy line-up is particularly appetising with Russell Howard, Reggie Watts and Josh Widdicombe, to name just a few. Sadler’s Wells will be gracing the Waterfront stage wilth beautifully choreographed dance routines, and those who like to party late can enjoy DJ sets from Guilty Pleasures and Disco Shed among others.

Latitude Festival

Long gone are the festival days when you have to accept an overpriced greasy burger for dinner in between band sets. Speciality food trucks and culinary treats are available throughout the grounds from coffee vans to homemade ice-cream. This year, Latitude welcome a spa, Solas, an oasis of calm where you can book in a festival facial or relaxing foot spa. Manicures, pedicures and nail art are also available, so you can coordinate your nails with your festival outfits.

Latitude Festival

As I’ve been to Latitude before I can truly vouch for decent shower and loo facilities, but if you get really hot and sweaty you could always jump in the idyllic lake… or stay dry and enjoy a free boat ride instead.

Weekend and day tickets are available to buy for Latitude Festival 2016 here.

Shepherd House, Faversham

I had never considered visiting Faversham, that is until I discovered Shepherd House. Clare Weston and her husband Simon have recently bought this beautiful Georgian property and have decorated the period house into what is now Kent’s most stylish b&b.

The boutique accommodation is minutes away from Faversham station, where a fast train takes just 1 hour to get to London King’s Cross, making it the perfect weekend escape. We arrived on a sunny Wednesday afternoon, greeted by the lovely smiley Clare. I fell instantly in love with the house and felt like Clare was an old friend welcoming us into her home. Downstairs, we admired the vibrant green and yellow living room, which embraces the Georgian features while adding a contemporary personality and sense of fun with modern artwork, fresh flowers and patterned rugs. Vintage jazz music was playing and a small spirit collection is left out for guests who wish to relax with an evening aperitif.

Currently there are three bedrooms of varying sizes, though work is underway to open a few more soon. We quickly settled into the ‘Very, very large double’ bedroom, our home for the night. Clare has a real talent for interiors – each of the rooms has a subtle colour theme with vintage and modern touches that are carefully balanced to create a sophisticated but relaxing environment to spend time in. All of the bedrooms feature indulgent bathtubs, ours was a freestanding masterpiece from Albion Bath Co. The room was decorated in a palate of pinks and greys with the original floorboards, fireplaces and grand windows still intact. Appealing coffee table books and seasonal flowers adorned every surface and the king size bed was topped with a soft duvet and cushions.

The bathroom was my favourite part, with luxurious his-and/hers rain showers, expensive Kiehl’s toiletries and views overlooking the town. Shiny grey and black tiles contrast with the dusty pink paint and give a glamorous retro feel.

We spent as much time as possible in our bedroom, flicking through the books, listening to music from the retro Roberts radio and making good use of the coffee facilities… the Tanzanian Garage Coffee was the best I’ve ever tasted in a hotel room. I slept for much longer than I normally would, my body relishing the opportunity to truly unwind. In the morning the large windows let in bursts of sunlight, it was bliss.

Guests are encouraged to enjoy the whole property and the spacious garden at the back is particularly lovely on sunnier days. Breakfast in the morning is served in the living room and Clare cooked up a feast for us to devour, it was as delicious as it looks. Fresh juice and coffee, fruit salad, yoghurt and pastries arrived first. We picked at things while catching up on emails and reading the days’ news. Then came the main event, hot dishes from the lavish brunch menu. The full breakfast and French toast with blueberries and bacon were both delicious, so good in fact that I wondered if Clare had thought of opening up as a brunch parlour for outside guests too.

Nearby, guests may choose to visit picturesque Whitstable for fresh oysters or hip Margate where the new Dreamland and Turner Contemporary gallery are boosting tourism. Foodies will delight at the opportunity to visit Britain’s no.1 gastropub, The Sportsman in Seasalter. Needless to say there is more than enough to keep you busy for a weekend minibreak, though I wouldn’t blame you if you barely ventured out, Shepherd House is pretty difficult to say goodbye to.

More information and book a room at Shepherd House here.