Tag: exhibitions

  • From Flowers Gallery to Bankside: Bianca Rafaella’s Evolving Brushwork

    How a lunch break in London returned me to this female artist’s layered, luminous world

    A soft, abstract painting featuring white flowers with delicate blue accents against a muted pink background. Painting by Bianca Raffaella.
    Murmurous Shadows (2024) by Bianca Raffaella. Photo credit: Flowers Gallery.

    Around a year ago, somewhere between the end of February and the beautiful prospects of spring and sunshine that come when March finally makes an appearance, I was around central London doing one of my favourite things – gallery hopping – and found myself on Cork Street in Mayfair. I was lucky enough to be there at the exact right time, for I discovered the wonderful artistic world of Margate-based artist Bianca Raffaella in her show Faint Memories; a collection of evocative and emotional textural flower paintings that, being rightly exhibited at Flowers Gallery, left a very remarkable memory – far from faint – in my head.

    Abstract painting of white flowers against a soft pink background, with delicate brush strokes and drips of paint for a dreamy effect. Painting by Bianca Raffaella.
    The Leaves Hast Never Known (2024) by Bianca Raffaela. Photo credit: Flowers Gallery.

    Now, a year later, after another very long, wet and dark winter, I have the privilege of being able to spend my lunch break in the always inspiring Art Academy in Bankside. I headed there last week after passing by their inviting big windows on my way to work and making a mental note to return during my midday break. Little did I know I would be straightaway starstruck when, upon entering the doors, I saw those fantastic words written on their exhibition intro wall: Bianca Raffaella.

    On view from 25 February to 8 March 2026, The Women in Art Prize Exhibition celebrates Rafaella’s recognition as the Overall Winner of the 2025 prize and brings together a powerful selection of her recent works. Set within the light-filled, minimalist exhibition space of the Art Academy, the exhibition centres on her expressive monoprints and large-scale portraits from Just Out of Reach and She Cannot Fade (both 2025). Alongside these elating, gestural works, eight delicate white-on-white relief pieces introduce a quieter, tactile dimension; reinforcing Rafaella’s ongoing exploration of perception, memory and the shifting nature of sight.

    Abstract painting featuring soft brush strokes in shades of white, cream, and pale green, with hints of blue and small white flowers, creating a serene and dreamy atmosphere. Painting by Bianca Raffaella.
    Fading Flora (2024) by Bianca Raffaela. Photo credit: Flowers Gallery.

    My first encounter with Raffaella’s work stayed with me due to its ethereal, spontaneous, almost nostalgic nature. The paintings in Faint Memories take shape with layers of muted pinks, washed lilacs, chalky whites and softened greens, which depict in an abstract yet slightly botanical way, soft images of flowers with thin stems, more suggested than defined. In particular, the works Fading Flora and Murmurous Shadows (both 2024), with soft touches of delicate blue, caught my eye, evoking Woman at Her Toilette by the female Impressionist Berthe Morisot. And it was precisely this colourful detail that made me connect the dots immediately the moment I walked into Raffaella’s current exhibition in Bankside.

    A woman in a white dress with a blue ribbon is seen from the back as she arranges her hair in front of a mirror. The setting has soft, muted colors and floral patterns in the background. Painting by Berthe Morisot.
    Woman at Her Toilette (1875–80) by Berthe Morisot. Photo credit: Art Institute Chicago.

    Prints such as Echoes of Disorientation and Invisible in a Crowded Room (both 2025) retain the elusiveness of the artist’s relatively abstract approach to painting, while remaining perfectly clear. Her collection of portraits reveals different degrees of detail, with hardly-there strokes of paint and texture that create wonderfully intimate images.

    An abstract painting featuring a face with a light color palette, predominantly blue and white hues, on a brown paper background. Painting by Bianca Raffaella.
    Invisible in a Crowded Room (2025) by Bianca Raffaella. Photo credit: Words on Art.

    The soft details of gold and silver in some of the prints, like Childlike Wonder (2025), at times evoke that romantic image of mythical nature deities and remind me of the mastery of shining pigments and the natural world by US-based artist Katie Rogers, which I have followed for decades.

    An abstract painting featuring strokes of white, gold, and muted colors, creating a textured, layered appearance. Painting by Bianca Raffaella.
    Childlike Wonder (2025) by Bianca Raffaella. Photo credit: Words on Art.

    While Rafaella’s practice also includes a more expansive use of colour and adventurous brushstrokes, as well as less abstract representations, it is her proficiency at using chalky whites and faded hues that has attracted me from the beginning. It is also what has made an enduring impression on me, staying with me in each encounter with her work.

    Abstract painting with soft brush strokes in shades of blue, red, and silver, creating a textured and layered effect on a neutral background. Painting by Bianca Raffaella.
    Projection of My Reality (2025) by Bianca Raffaela. Photo credit: Words on Art.

    In her own words, this line from the video on display at Art Academy in Bankside summarises the emotion of the experience perfectly: “Sometimes I can just allow myself to feel”. And perhaps that is precisely why encountering her work once again, just as winter begins to give us a break and I can see the first buds of my light pink camellia blooming, feels so fitting. A year after discovering her on Cork Street, the memory is no longer faint. In fact, it reminds me why I continue to seek out those quiet, luminous moments hidden behind gallery doors.

    The Women in Art Prize Exhibition at Art Academy in Bankside is open and free to visit until 8th March 2026, closing on International Women’s Day with a special 1pm conversation with Bianca Raffaella.

    If you don’t have the chance to see it, you can find more images from the exhibition on my Instagram.

  • Reflections of Movement

    In the “Lines of Feeling” section of the National Portrait Gallery in London, two drawings – full of movement, energy and feeling – stand out with dynamic lines and emotional impact.

    On one hand, “Study of John” (2010) by Jenny Saville. On the other, “Richard Nicoll” (2016) by Howard Tangye. Both artworks show a drawing of a seated man; one older, one younger, respectively. Both are the centre point of focus, with no additional images or colours on the background. Although drawn with quick, sketch-like lines, both pieces explore a level of emotion that reflects a fleeting moment.

    Saville, whose artistic practice has been described as “reinventing figure painting for contemporary art”, invokes her deep fascination for the extremities of anatomy, focusing with greater detail on the features of the face and the hands of the subject. Her study, painted with black charcoal over a stained-aged piece of parchment, shows an anatomically more detailed image of a man sitting on an armed chair, surrounded by additional lines that represent the remnants of what was his previous pose. A peaceful, yet dynamic expression of his movements during the sitting. Unlike Saville’s, the drawing of the figurative abstract artist Howard Tangye includes some layers of colour, while also exploring the essence of the subject through his movement – perhaps even his feelings – during the sitting. The portrait of the late Richard Nicoll presents him in two calm, meditative overlayered poses. With his eyes closed, his hands with fingers intertwined on his lap, one outline shows him with his legs separated and his head hanging down (as if asleep), while the other shows a more active posture, immersed in thought, with his right ankle over his left knee. The quiet yet colourful image – contrasting with Saville’s monochromatic work – almost seems to reflect with this movement of the lines the taciturn mood of the subject.

    Both artworks proclaim a level of emotion and engagement in the present moment that immerse the viewer, almost as if they were attending that precise sitting, seeing the subject move, act, and feel while the artists expertly outline the reflections of their movements on to the canvases.

  • The Art of Kissing by Women Artists

    Love has fascinated artists since the beginning of time, with painters, sculpturers and photographers exploring the art of kissing in many different forms and mediums.

    Beyond the famous depictions of this act of intimacy by male artists, like The Kiss by Gustav Klimt (1907-1908), The Lovers by René Magritte (1928) or The Kiss by Auguste Rodin (1882), the history of art tends to forget about the representation of love from a female perspective.

    Here are 5 artworks by women artists that reveal the kiss as different kinds of love.

    1. “The Kiss of Peace” – Julia Margaret Cameron (1869)

    Picture of the artwork “The Kiss of Peace” by Julia Margaret Cameron (1869)
    Julia Margaret Cameron, The Kiss of Peace, 1869, via Artnet

    The Kiss of Peace captures an intimate moment between two young women – perhaps mother and daughter, sisters or friends. This dreamlike photograph by Julia Margaret Cameron, whose use of soft-focus was groundbreaking for 19th-century photography, depicts the kiss as an act of forgiveness or reconciliation, other expression of love. The use of light and blur enhances the ethereal, emotional depth of this moment of tenderness immortalised by the artist.

    2. “Mother and Child” – Tamara de Lempicka (ca. 1922)

    Picture of the artowrk “Mother and Child” by Tamara de Lempicka (ca. 1922)
    Tamara de Lempicka, Mother and Child, circa 1922, via Artnet

    The tender embrace of a mother kissing her baby takes centre stage in this painting by Tamara de Lempicka. Showcasing a blend of Cubist influences and soft and sculptural forms, the 20th-century artist celebrates the purest form of love: mother’s love. This painting presents a modern, secular interpretation of motherhood, emphasizing elegance and contemporary femininity. “Mother and Child” embodies Lempicka’s signature glossy, stylised approach, merging modern life with classical beauty.

    3. “The Kiss” – Marlene Dumas (2003)

    Picture of the artwork “The Kiss” by Marlene Dumas (2003).
    Marlene Dumas, The Kiss, 2003, via Artsy

    Love and pain are inextricably linked. And the depiction of a kiss in this artwork by Marlene Dumas could be interpreted as both. The image shows the profile of a person facing down, with their lips touching a surface at the bottom. Their eyes are closed. Their lips and nose slightly pressed. The surface at the bottom is not clear. It could be the body of another person, a plain inanimate object or even the back of the arm of the person in the image, who is kissing their own body. The emotion is ambiguous, portraying as much passion and devotion as pain or pressure, as remarked by the artist herself: “No painting can exist […] without the pleasure of what it could mean and the pain of what it’s not.” The image leaves a strong remark and as sense of uncertainty about the concept of love.

    4. “Elizabeth What Wondrous Things…” – Elizabeth Pyton (2012-2013)

    Picture of the artwork “Elizabeth What Wondrous Things...” by Elizabeth Pyton (2012-2013)
    Elizabeth Pyton, Elizabeth What Wondrous Things…, 2012-2013, via Artnet

    Passion, fascination, intimacy. All these are common aspects in the work of Elizabeth Peyton, who focuses her paintings primarily on the feelings. The strong, simple brushstrokes, and black and white colour palette set the scene with as much tenderness as dynamism. “A record of two people being in one room together at one time.” The two protagonists share a moment as deeply personal as evocative of a universal experience. A quick everyday kiss, a cautious first kiss, a goodbye kiss, a shy kiss, a passionate kiss. The interpretation is open to seduce the viewer. 

    5. “Kiss” – Elinor Carucci (2017)

    Picture of the artwork “Kiss” by Elinor Carucci (2017).
    Elinor Carucci, Kiss, 2017, via Artsy

    Dramatic lighting and a careful composition define this close-up of a kiss by Elinor Carucci. With his mouth partially open, a man approaches the lips of a woman. Her lips remain close. Her expression unclear. Are they both about to abandon themselves to a passionate kiss? Will she refuse his intentions to kiss her? Will she give in and embrace his intentions? A depiction of an “almost kiss”, which can be read as much as a manifesto of love and passion, as a gesture of refusal.