Link to Post:
http://patternsthatconnext.wordpress.com/2013/03/07/callum-innes-at-whitworth-art-gallery/
Andy Parkinson reviews an exhibition of recent paintings by Callum Innes at Whitworth Art Gallery, Manchester, on view through June 16, 2013.
Parkinson writes that in viewing the painting Untitled 31, "there’s something timeless... except that it also seems to mark the passing of time both of the artist in the making of it and of the viewer who wishes to stay on and gaze. It may be more accurate to say that it induces a time distortion. I get absorbed in the process of seeing, at first accompanied with internal dialogue but less and less so. Time seems to have stopped. It’s not altogether a reverie, nor is it all emotion; whilst there is something emotional about it, there is also 'something for the mind to do.' I become fascinated by the line that separates the two ‘halves’ or that joins them, there does seem to be an actual line which can be seen very close up, absent from middle distance but becoming magnified optically after prolonged viewing from where I am seated a few feet away. The surface also takes on a slightly undulating quality. I have the impression that these optical effects are bi-products of the painting process rather than deliberately sought after or designed-in by the artist."
Link to Post:
http://bombsite.com/articles/4974
Tabitha Piseno interviews Callum Innes and Colm Toíbín. Innes, a painter and Toíbín, a writer, collaborated on a commission exhibited at Sean Kelly Gallery as "water / colour, an installation of 101 watercolors by Innes, and excerpts of text from the short story Toíbín wrote in response to the artist’s paintings." Interviewed individually, each artist discusses the other's work and the process of artistic collaboration.
Link to Post:
http://channel.tate.org.uk/tateshots-blog/2011/02/10/tateshots-callum-innes-studio-visit/
The Tate exhibition Watercolour is on view through August 2011. Tate Shots visits artist Callum Innes at his studio. Innes' demonstrates his watercolor painting process and discusses the role of watercolor both in his own studio practice and in contemporary painting.
Link to Post:
http://romanblog2.blogspot.com/2011/01/new-york-shows.html
Vincent Romaniello gives a glimpse of three New York shows Callum Innes, Colm Tóibín, water colour at Sean Kelly, Ricardo Mazal at Sundaram Tagore, and Huma Bhabha at Peter Blum.