24 Hour Museum  
 
Text-only Version
October 11 2008
Search this site
Home
City Guides
Show Me
News
Exhibitions
What's On
Trails
Website of the Week
Letters
Links
For Museums and Galleries
For Teachers
For Volunteers
Press
Welsh Home
About Us
ICONS - a portrait of England
Map Search
Exhibitions Online
e-news Registration
arts council england logo
MLA
System Simulation Ltd
 
THE TORTOISE AND THE HARE AT THE UNIVERSITY GALLERY, LEEDS
By Richard Moss 30/04/2003
Shows Two Studies of a Woman (Sarah) by Jacob Kramer. Chalk and pastel on paper.

Left: Jacob Kramer, Two studies of a woman (Sarah). 1916. Picture Courtesy University Gallery Leeds

The University Gallery in Leeds is hosting a duo show until June 20 that contrasts the styles and preoccupations of two of the great innovators of early twentieth century art.

Titled the 'Tortoise and the Hare' - the exhibition of works by William Roberts and Jacob Kramer has been put together by the Ben Uri Gallery in London as the third in their 'Whitechapel Boys' series of East End Jewish Art.

Right: Jacob Kramer, Head of a Russian. Picture courtesy Ben Read.

Shows the drawing, Head of a Rusian, by Jacob Kramer.

William Roberts was a founder member of the Vorticists and an official war artist. He is widely recognised as one of the most original artists of the 20th century and is particularly renowned for his portraits of Londoners at work and at play.

His contemporary Jacob Kramer worked periodically in London until the 1930's and was a key figure in the early development of English modernism. Ultimately he turned his back on London and the wider art scene, returning to Leeds where he worked as a draughtsman becoming an active member of the city's cultural scene.

Shows the painting, The Jew, an oil on canvas by Jacon Kramer

Left: Jacob Kramer, The Jew, 1916. Picture, University Gallery Leeds

It is Roberts who is cast as the tortoise - with his reputation for having an everyday routine and being focused in his art, with Kramer as the hare, his Jewish Russian émigré background marking him out as a bohemian with a penchant for all things spiritual and philosophical.

Chronologically arranged to best reflect the artist's visual development and divergence the exhibition works best in juxtaposition. Both attended the Slade and were influenced by classicism before responding in their own ways to the abstraction of the 1910's and 1920's.

Right: Jacob Kramer, 'Ah know wot's up wi' thee!', illustration for 'Tyke' June 1929. Picture courtesy University Gallery Leeds.

Shows the drawing, 'ah know wot's up wi' thee' by Jacob Kramer

There is an abiding interest in family from both artists but Kramer's search for the spiritual in his art is a distinct contrast to Roberts' dedication in recording the daily life of Londoners and the influence of the First World War.

Amongst the eighty items encompassing paintings, drawings and ephemera, the show also explores the part of Sarah Roberts (the wife of William and sister of Jacob) in her role as a model for both artists as well as Roberts' muse and support.

Shows the Depostion, a ink drawing by Jacob Kramer.

Left: Jacob Kramer, The Deposition. Picture, University Gallery, Leeds.

It makes for an intriguing exhibition that reflects the contrasting styles and responses of two major figures of British twentieth century art.

Stanley and Audrey Burton Gallery, University of Leeds
 

Parkinson Building, Woodhouse Lane, Leeds, LS2 9JT, West Yorkshire, England
T: 0113 343 2778
Open: Mon-Fri, 10.00-17.00
Closed: Sat and Sun Holidays

Related Articles
Refurbished And Expanded Leeds University Art Gallery Now Open
 
285
Visit our City Heritage Guides for more news about Leeds
| e-news registration | e-mail story to a friend | tell us what you think |
 
More Than 75 Exhibitions - The Brighton Photo Fringe 2008More Than 75 Exhibitions - The Brighton Photo Fringe 2008
Thomas Hirschhorn - The Incommensurable At Brighton's FabricaThomas Hirschhorn - The Incommensurable At Brighton's Fabrica
Remembering The Great War At Imperial War Museum LondonRemembering The Great War At Imperial War Museum London
Allen Ruppersberg's First Solo Show At Camden Arts CentreAllen Ruppersberg's First Solo Show At Camden Arts Centre
New Light On Andy Warhol''s Works At Hayward Gallery, LondonNew Light On Andy Warhol''s Works At Hayward Gallery, London
Miró, Calder, Giacometti, Braque At The Royal AcademyMiró, Calder, Giacometti, Braque At The Royal Academy
Brighton Photo Biennial 2008 Questions War PhotographyBrighton Photo Biennial 2008 Questions War Photography
Hunterian Museum Exhibits Drawings Of Rare DiseaseHunterian Museum Exhibits Drawings Of Rare Disease
Tracey Chevalier Curates A Thousand Words At York GalleryTracey Chevalier Curates A Thousand Words At York Gallery
Both Sides Of The Iron Curtain - Cold War Modern At The V&ABoth Sides Of The Iron Curtain - Cold War Modern At The V&A
Four Hopefuls Unveiled For The Turner Prize 2008 At Tate Britain
MADE UP At Liverpool Biennial Of Contemporary Arts 2008
National Maritime Museum Displays Francis Frith Postcard Images
Iconic Rothko Seagram Murals Reunited At Tate Modern
Emerging Polish Artists At Town Hall Galleries Ipswich
Catherine Yass High Wire At The German Gymnasium London
Stephen Turner Fuses People and Plants At Fermynwoods
Sir Benjamin Stone's Photos Shown Outdoors In Birmingham
Exhibitions online
e-news Registration