Features
Road to Recovery: The Women Turning Illness Into Sick Art

There is a myth, writes Alice Hattrick in their new book, Ill Feelings, that to be ill is to hide, “that to be inexplicably ill and dependent on the care and support of others is a choice, a way of getting out of what you don’t want to do, a choice that clever, deceitful young women make for themselves”.

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Designs for life

Auctioneer Stéphane Aubert rolls up on his Vespa at the entrance to an enormous storage space in the industrial no-man’s-land northwest of Paris. He’s sharply dressed in a shirt and tie, his navy pinstripe suit is crease-free and his black brogues are polished to a shine. He slips off his helmet and smiles.

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Group dynamics

Cromwell Place is in good company. Spread across five white, stucco-fronted Victorian townhouses in London’s South Kensington, the new exhibition and co-working space shares a neighbourhood with world-renowned art, design and history institutions.

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Look this way

Mark Rothko’s Seagram murals make you stop and think. Not necessarily about what they represent but how you feel. Their brooding veils of colour and blurry outlines draw you in. They’re like windows and doors, portals into another realm, with dusky planes and ragged edges.

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William Scott: abstracting and appreciating the everyday

To some art critics, William Scott's kitchen-table still lifes are too timid – as Roberta Smith wrote in The New York Times, they can be seen as 'abstract paintings for people who don't like abstraction'. Others, myself included, find them enticingly reduced and for the most part easily readable, which is part of their charm.

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Far sighted

Dora Maar’s surrealist photographs linger in the memory long after the first look. Take Portrait of Ubu (1936), a melancholy armadillo foetus, or Untitled (Hand-Shell) (1934), where elegant fingers replace the nubby body of a hermit crab, scuttling along the sand. 

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Off the beaten track

“If I’d opened a gallery here in the beginning, no one would have come,” says Joana Grevers, sitting in the sun-dappled courtyard of her old family estate in Cetate, a small village on the Danube in southwest Romania.

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Growing up in the family shoe shop

My brother and I knew it, simply, as “the shop”. The meeting point at which we’d gather after school. The place we’d visit for private fittings on Sundays, when the lights were dimmed and the doors were locked.

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