London - 3 March 2010 - 25 April 2010

Richard Hamilton

Richard Hamilton: Portrait of Hugh Gaitskell as a Famous Monster of Filmland 1964
Richard Hamilton: Portrait of Hugh Gaitskell as a Famous Monster of Filmland 1964

Detail, Oil and collage on photograph on panel
© 2009 Richard Hamilton

Click on image to enlarge.

Share

Richard Hamilton has embraced many different media since the 1950s, including painting, printmaking, installation, typography and industrial design. This major exhibition will reassess the nature of the British artist's pioneering contribution, focusing on Hamilton's political works.

The installations, prints and paintings on view take international politics, riots, terrorist acts and war as their subject matter, examining how these conflicts are represented by the media, including via television and the internet.

Hamilton has seen great changes in communication technologies throughout his working life. In 1969, he noted that: "In the Fifties we became more aware of the possibility of seeing the whole world, at once, through the great visual matrix that surrounds us, a synthetic 'instant' view. Cinema, television, magazines, newspapers flooded the artist with a total landscape."

Through its fragmentation of images, manipulation of space and reference to different styles and genres, Hamilton's work interrogates the representations that surround us. Yet his analysis of the image is counterbalanced by an underlying, allegoric lyricism, through which he reinvigorates the genres of portraiture and history painting.

This survey of Hamilton's political works also explores in depth the artist's working processes and the varied ways he uses photographic material. It investigates his continued interest in creating multiples of a single, iconic image as both a mirror and a critique of the visual overload created by the media.

Hamilton, born in 1922, was a leading instigator of Pop Art in Britain and a key member of the Independent Group, formed in the 1950s by a group of artists and writers at London's Institute of Contemporary Arts. Retrospective exhibitions of his work have been held in the UK at the Hanover Gallery (1964) and Tate Gallery (1970 and 1992). Hamilton was Britain's representative at the 1993 Venice Biennale.

The artist has previously collaborated with the Gallery on projects including the Serpentine Gallery Interview Marathon (2006). "Richard Hamilton: Modern Moral Matters" is a development of the exhibition "Richard Hamilton: Protest Pictures" at Inverleith House, Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh (2008).

Serpentine Gallery

Kensington Gardens
W2 3XA London
Phone: 
+44 20 7402 6075
Fax: 
+44 20 7402 4103
Exhibition
3 March 2010 - 25 April 2010
Online since 1 March 2010
Opening Hours: 
daily from 10 am to 6 pm