The show, Howard Hodgkin: Absent Friends (23 March-18 June 2017), focuses on an enduring yet relatively overlooked aspect of Hodgkin’s work. More than 55 works from 1949 to the present will explore “his important contribution to our understanding of what constitutes a portrait”, according to a statement from the gallery.
Hogkin’s apparently abstract paintings “represent memories and emotions rather than literal appearances”, says the exhibition’s curator, Paul Moorhouse. “But these wonderfully sensuous and often intimate images are nevertheless entirely about people.” The artist has described himself as a “representational painter”, a maker of “representational pictures of emotional situations”.
Left, I am in training don't kiss me by Claude Cahun (around 1927) and Me as Cahun holding a mask of my face by Gillian Wearing (2012) (Images: Jersey Heritage Collections © Jersey Heritage; courtesy the artist and Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, New York and Maureen Paley, London © Gillian Wearing)
The show, Gillian Wearing and Claude Cahun: Behind the Mask, Another Mask (9 March-29 May 2017), “seems particularly timely” in light of the 50th anniversary of the decriminalisation of homosexuality in 2017, says its curator, Sarah Howage.
The National Portrait Gallery’s spring season is sponsored by the law firm Herbert Smith Freehills.