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Shows that Go On
Malika Browne
14 episodes
1 month ago
Why do some museum exhibitions achieve legendary status? Why are some shows still talked and thought about long after they are over? From Tutankhamen (1972) to Francis Bacon (1988), from the Surrealists exhibition (1923) to Sensation (1997), in every episode I discuss a show that changed everything with an expert.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Arts
Society & Culture,
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Why do some museum exhibitions achieve legendary status? Why are some shows still talked and thought about long after they are over? From Tutankhamen (1972) to Francis Bacon (1988), from the Surrealists exhibition (1923) to Sensation (1997), in every episode I discuss a show that changed everything with an expert.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Arts
Society & Culture,
History
Episodes (14/14)
Shows that Go On
S3: E1: Exposition Universelle, Paris 1900

In this episode Malika Browne talks to writer and broadcaster Muriel Zagha about the spectacular Exposition Universelle that transformed Paris in 1900, and discusses how it created the image of Paris as the City of Lights. A must-listen for anyone who loves Paris, who is interested in French culture, and anyone who is fascinated by world expos!


Further Reading:

Paul Morand, 1900

Albert Robida, Le Vingtième Siècle (1883), La Guerre au Vingtième Siècle (1887), Le Vingtième Siècle (la Vie électrique) (1890)


Watch:

Colourised footage of the Trottoir Roulant at the Expo https://youtu.be/VvMH0sGQh8M


This is a Froody Music production. Thank you to Martin Lumsden for producing.


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1 month ago
53 minutes 35 seconds

Shows that Go On
S2:E6 Britain can make it, 1946

Harriet Atkinson is AHRC Leadership Fellow and Senior Lecturer in History of Art and Design at University of Brighton


Her latest book is Showing resistance: Propaganda and Modernist exhibitions in Britain, 1933–53


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6 months ago
36 minutes 57 seconds

Shows that Go On
S2: E5 The Weather Project, 2003

In this episode Malika Browne talks to art historian, author and museum director Will Gompertz about Olafur Eliasson’s unforgettable installation in the Turbine Hall at Tate Modern in 2003. Was it an exhibition in the strictest sense of the word? Or was it an installation, a happening or even an ‘environment’? It was certainly a landmark event in London that decade. Will worked at Tate at the time, and has fascinating insights into the exhibition and how it came about.



This is a Froody Music production. Thanks to Martin Lumsden


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7 months ago
32 minutes 34 seconds

Shows that Go On
S2: E4 Cybernetic Serendipity, 1968

In this episode Malika Browne talks to Melanie Lenz, digital curator at the V&A about the groundbreaking exhibition Cybernetic Serendipity at the ICA in `London in 1968 in a discussion that explores the origins and the military uses of cybernetics, the difference between cybernetics and AI, and the effect this show had on its visitors in the pre-computer age.


DO NOT MISS Electric Dreams at Tate Modern on til 1st June 2025, about art and technology before the internet. It has a whole room about Cybernetic Serendipity!


Further Reading:

"Cybernetic Serendipity": The First Widely-Attended International Exhibition of Computer Art

Seven minute piece of footage from 1968 of curator Jasia Reichardt explaining her fascinating show


This is a Froody Music production. Thanks to Martin Lumsden



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8 months ago
33 minutes 49 seconds

Shows that Go On
S2: E3 Sensation, 1997


In this episode Malika Browne talks to art historian and author Dr Ben Street about the shocking exhibition Sensation at the Royal Academy in London in 1997, and describes the rise of the YBAs (Young British Artists) and what a pivotal moment it was for British art in the decade when the UK was dubbed Cool Britannia.


Further Reading:

Lucky Kunst by Gregor Muir


This is a Froody Music production. Thanks to Martin Lumsden



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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10 months ago
48 minutes 56 seconds

Shows that Go On
S2: E2 The Great Exhibition 1851

In this episode Malika Browne talks to journalist, novelist and biographer A N Wilson about the Great Exhibition of 1851, which took place in Hyde Park over six months and attracted over 6 million visitors. The profit from the wildly popular international commercial exhibition led to the founding of London’s now famous South Kensington museums, and the area known as Albertopolis. The Royal Commission for the 1851 exhibition goes on to this day, dispensing grants to scientists.


Further Reading:

Prince Albert: The man who saved the monarchy by A N Wilson

The World for a Shilling by Michael Leapman


https://royalcommission1851.org/


This is a Froody Music production. Thanks to Martin Lumsden



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11 months ago
43 minutes 59 seconds

Shows that Go On
S2: E1 Manet and the Post Impressionists 1910

In this episode, art historian and curator David Boyd Haycock describes Roger Fry’’s legendary exhibition, Manet and the Post Impressionists held at the Grafton Galleries in 1910. In her essay Mr Bennett and Mrs Brown, Virginia Woolf wrote that on or about 1910, “human character changed”, a statement generally accepted to be a reference to the Post Impressionists show.


Further Reading:

A Crisis of Brilliance by David Boyd Haycock

Roger Fry, an autobiography by Virginia Woolf

The Sultan of Zanzibar by Martyn Downer about the spectacular hoaxes of Horace de Vere Cole, including the Dreadnought Hoax of 1910.

Mr Bennett and Mrs Brown - an essay by Virginia Woolf


This is an Ictus Media production, edited by Leo Hornak and produced by Howie Shannon



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1 year ago
43 minutes 28 seconds

Shows that Go On
S1: E6 The Armory Show, 1913

In this episode, art historian Irene Walsh describes the now legendary Armory Show of 1913 in New York City. Irene wrote her PhD on art collector Lillie P Bliss, and she tells us about the groundbreaking show's shock value, the mockery that surrounded some of the paintings in it, and their unexpected effects on the American public and the art market. She tells us how the show led to the founding of New York's MoMa in 1929.


Further Reading:

The Story of the Armory Show by Milton W Brown, Abbeville Press Inc.,U.S. 1988

The Armory Show at 100: Modernism and Revolution by Kushner, Orcutt and Blake, 2013

The chapter on the Armory show in The Shock of the New: Seven Historic Exhibitions of Modern Art by Ian Dunlop, 1972


This is an Ictus Media production, edited by Leo Hornak



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1 year ago
37 minutes 53 seconds

Shows that Go On
S1: E5 Seeing Salvation, 2000

In this episode, guest Dr Xavier Bray, director of the Wallace Collection, describes the surprise hit exhibition in London in 2000: Seeing Salvation, Image of Christ, at the National Gallery. He shares his memories of being an assistant (and very junior) curator of the show and explains why images of Christ still resonate and matter. He talks about the impact of art on us and suggests what sort of exhibition the world perhaps needs at this troubled time.


Further Reading:

The Image of Christ: The Catalogue of the Exhibition "Seeing Salvation" (National Gallery of London) by Gabriele Finaldi (2000-11-10)

Seeing Salvation by Neil MacGregor and Erika Langmuir (2000)


This is an Ictus Media production, edited by Leo Hornak



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1 year ago
39 minutes 28 seconds

Shows that Go On
S1:E4 Beaton Portraits, 1968


In this episode, guest Susanna Brown explains why the Cecil Beaton show of 1968 was groundbreaking, both for photography as an art, as well as for the National Portrait Gallery. Both its content and its design changed the museum, exhibitions, and photograph in Britain forever.


Further Reading:

Cecil Beaton's diaries in 6 parts in particular The Parting Years: 1963-74, Sapere Books, 2018

The Roy Strong Diaries 1967-1987, Weidenfeld & Nicholson 1997

Beaton's Bright Young Things, Robin Muir, National Portrait Gallery, 2020



Beaton by Bailey - watch on Youtube



This is an Ictus Media production, edited by Leo Hornak




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1 year ago
46 minutes 57 seconds

Shows that Go On
S1: E3 54-64 Painting and Sculpture of a Decade 1964

Malika Browne talks to former art critic Ian Dunlop about the landmark art show for Swinging London at the Tate, in 1964 for which the museum's Duveen Galleries were turned into a claustrophobic labyrinth of new art from America and Europe, putting London firmly on the art map.


Further reading:


The Shock of the New: Seven Historic Exhibitions of Modern Art by Ian Dunlop, 1972


This is an Ictus Media production, edited by Leo Hornak

London’s New Scene: Art and Culture in the 1960s by Professor Lisa Tickner, Yale University Press in 2020.


Watching:


Pop Goes the Easel by Ken Russell, 1962

Blow Up by Michelangelo Antonioni, 1966



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1 year ago
23 minutes 8 seconds

Shows that Go On
S1:E2 The Destruction of the Country House Show, 1974


In this episode, guest Sir Simon Jenkins explains how a simple yet powerful exhibition of black and white photographs shamed and shocked the government and the public, and brought about a change in policy towards country houses.


Further Reading:

England's 1000 best Houses (2003) by Simon Jenkins

Life in the English Country House: A Social and Architectural History (1978) by Marc Girouard


This is an Ictus Media production, edited by Leo Hornak


The Destruction of The Country House 1875-1975 by Roy Strong, Marcus Binney and John Harris

England's Lost Houses: From the Archives of Country Life (2002) Aurum Press by Giles Worsley





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1 year ago
39 minutes 45 seconds

Shows that Go On
S1: E1 Bacon in Moscow, 1988

Malika Browne talks to James Birch about Francis Bacon's exhibition at the Union of Artists in Moscow in 1988, the first by a foreign artist in the USSR since 1917. Why did Francis Bacon agree to it? How hard was it to organise a Western art show in the USSR in 1988? Find out by listening!


Further reading:


Bacon in Moscow by James Birch, Cheerio 2022

With Gilbert and George in Moscow by Dan Farson, Bloomsbury 1991


This is an Ictus Media production, edited by Leo Hornak




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1 year ago
40 minutes 12 seconds

Shows that Go On
Trailer
This is an Ictus Media production, edited by Leo Hornak

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1 year ago
39 seconds

Shows that Go On
Why do some museum exhibitions achieve legendary status? Why are some shows still talked and thought about long after they are over? From Tutankhamen (1972) to Francis Bacon (1988), from the Surrealists exhibition (1923) to Sensation (1997), in every episode I discuss a show that changed everything with an expert.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.