insideKENT Magazine Issue 34 - January 2015 | Page 19

COVERSTORY © Benjamin Beker THE WORLD-CLASS Turner Contemporary In just three and a half years, Turner Contemporary has welcomed more than 1.4 million visitors. For 2015, the gallery has an ambitious and stellar programme, which continues to bring historical and contemporary art together in new and dynamic ways. Turner Contemporary's 2015 programme adds to its already extensive list of world-class exhibitions and installations, including artists such as: Carl Andre; John Constable, Tracey Emin, Helen Frankenthaler, Sol LeWitt, Piet Mondrian, Auguste Rodin, JMW Turner and Edmund de Waal. In this extraordinary new exhibition Turner Contemporary becomes a frame through which self-portraiture is re-evaluated in the 21st century, sparking conversations on history, celebrity, collecting, gender, mortality and contemporary approaches. Artists have been recreating their own image for centuries. From selfadvertisement and preserving legacy, to figurative studies, political commentary and biographical exploration self-representation has shaped Western art. Central to the exhibition is the last known Selfportrait by Sir Anthony van Dyck (1599-1641), Court Painter to Charles I. Regarded as Britain’s first ‘celebrity’ artist, Van Dyck was also the most influential portrait painter ever to have worked in Britain and his legacy was to last for the next three centuries. The gallery welcomes in 2015 with Self: Image and Identity – selfportraiture from Van Dyck to Louise Bourgeois, which takes an expansive look at the self-portraiture genre. In a world where 'selfies' have become everyday Sir Anthony van Dyck, Self-Portrait, 1640-1 Oil on canvas expressions and © National Portrait Gallery, London ;Photo: Philip Mould & Co ‘Britishness’ is being redefined, what is the role of self-portraiture and how has it shifted through the history of art to the present day? Sir Anthony van Dyck’s remarkable Self-portrait was acquired by the National Portrait Gallery in 2014 19 through a major public appeal with the Art Fund, and with thanks to a major grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund (HLF) and the support of other major individual and trust supporters, and nearly 10,000 members of the public. Turner Contemporary will be the first venue where visitors can see Van Dyck’s Self-portrait as it embarks on a three-year national tour, supported by the Art Fund and HLF. The exhibition, which includes over 100 works, explores the diverse ways in which artists have chosen to represent themselves and their identities through painting, drawing, sculpture, photography and film. More than 70 works from the National Portrait Gallery will be showcased alongside key 20thcentury and contemporary selfportraits from public and private international collections.