Leon Golub and Nancy Spero: the Jon Bird Gift At British Museum Prints and Drawings

15.9.23

Observations by Mataio Austin Dean

A small exhibition of works on paper by Leon Golub and Nancy Spero. The works, which include etchings, screen prints, lithographs, hectographs, woodcuts with collage, and drawings, demonstrate Golub and Spero’s commitment to consciousness raising around issues of social injustice, violence, imperialism, sexism and racism.

Their engagement with print does not seem subordinated to their painting practices, but rather serving as another arena in which they have experimented with texture, colour, form, repetition, and symbology in fascinating ways. Golub’s use of figuration appears as if mediated through theological, Jewish-mystical planes of visual understanding. The violence of processes like etching into metal with acid and printing onto paper with immense pressures (which would easily crush a human skull) often seem distant and incidental in print works - but here they seem to interact with the sense of immediacy and brutalisation found in Golub’s paintings and with Golub and Spero’s preoccupations with brutality, authority, belligerence, and power.

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David Jones: The Stanley and Jacqueline Honeyman bequest at British Museum Prints and Drawings

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Pallant House Gallery: ‘Song for the Last Act’, Kaye Donachie