I See A Woman Crying: Tate Liverpool

So, this Picasso: what was he trying to say, like, really? When in doubt, ask the kids...

i see a woman cryingLet’s hear it for the support act. We know you’re going to turn left when you get to the Tate’s Picasso exhibition (for that way lies the entrance). But do spare ten minutes to enjoy one of the best video installations SevenStreets has seen for a while.

Rineke Dijkstra’s I See a Woman Crying runs until 30 August and is just a perfect marriage of medium and message: What happens when you show a Picasso to a class of ten year old kids? And what happens when you ask them to describe what they think is going on behind the brush strokes?

The image? Picasso’s Weeping Woman. The responses? Pure gold.

Take a transcript from this triptych and you could be listening to alternating snippets from Front Row, The South Bank Show and The Ricky Gervais Podcast.

Is the woman crying because ‘dead souls are entering her mouth’? Or is she crying because she’s happy ‘like they do on the X Factor’?

i see a woman crying 2Hey, you want blue sky thinking - you’d pay thousands for a hot-shot team of consultants to dig responses like these from that sluggish creative team you’ve got up in the marketing department.

Kids might say the funniest things - but quite often, they say the most perceptive things too. Although chances are Picasso’s woman wasn’t crying ‘because her step mother whipped her’. Nice try though.

Dijkstra’s steady gaze captures it all - just as it did when the Dutch born artist set up a video booth in The Buzz club and captured the thrills, pills and gurners of pre-Cream Liverpool.

Since then, Dijkstras’ returned to the city often. She says she finds plenty of inspiration here.

With her steely, unflinching and compassionate gaze, we’re sure she’d find it anywhere. But we’re more than happy she’s a regular visitor.

Reine Dijkstra: I See A Woman Crying (free)
To August 30
Tate Liverpool, Albert Dock

Images © Rineke Dijkstra
Courtesy the artist and Galerie Max Hetzler

RELATED » Review : Fab Collective: Having A Do
RELATED » Feature : It’s Time The Tale Were Told
RELATED » Feature : State of the Art
RELATED » Review : Picasso: Peace and Freedom
RELATED » Review : Liverpool Art Prize
23 July 2010

Your Comments

2 Comments so far

  1. Kate says:

    This is lovely. The kids are a credit to the school, wherever that is - real intelligence and emotion. Loved it!!

  2. Paul Argent says:

    Agree with Kate. This not just good art but some of the best art criticism you will ever hear!


Share your view

Post a comment

Fab Collective: Having A Do

— The Fab Collective's latest exhibition, Having A Do at the bombed-out church, is brought to life by the magical settings and a wonderful set of loosely-themed pictures from Liverpool's photographers.

hope street » HoST, Hope Street
bonk street theatre » From Beyond Iron Mountain
egg cafe » Egg Cafe, Newington
liverpool one » Objects of Affection: Vita Audio
Notable & noticed
09 August 2010

Tom

— Denizens of Aigburth and Sefton Park will no doubt have been driven by geography and circumstance to attend the Tesco’s near the junction with Lark...

06 August 2010

Overheard at the Parkfield pub quiz

— Quizmaster Che Burnley: “…and the answer is… The Netherlands.” Nearby and consistently annoying drunk: “Wha-? No way! It’s...

Our picks

Southport: Jedi Music Festival

Enjoy a walk in the park? How about live music? Not been to Southport for a while? Come on, we're not going to do it all for you...

Last Stand Festival

Can a music and culture festival, staged by a local community, really defeat plans for a massive supermarket in the area? The Last Stand Festival aims to do just that.

Hawk It Over

A Hawk And A Hacksaw bring Balkan folk to Liverpool
The best of Sevenstreets, directly to your inbox

© 2010 Sevenstreets.com | All rights reserved