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A unique and compelling view of the work of leading contemporary
artist Nalini Malani through the lens of her most recent commission
This publication presents the latest work of Nalini Malani (b.
1946), recipient of the 2022 National Gallery Contemporary
Fellowship with ArtFund. For over five decades, Malani's art has
focused on giving a voice to the stories of those marginalized by
history -particularly women. She is one of the most incisive
artists of our time, and the acute analysis and poetic compassion
of her experimental film, photography, painting, and drawing has
influenced generations of others from the 1960s to the present day.
For her first museum commission in the United Kingdom, Malani has
created an immersive installation of large-scale, animated drawings
inspired by the sites, histories, and collections of the National
Gallery, London, and the Holburne Museum, Bath. With a floating
palimpsest of digital images, Malani reveals, annotates, and shares
new, underlying stories in some of Europe's best-known paintings,
offering a contemporary and critical dialogue between past and
present. With leading articles based on new research, sumptuous
illustrations, and artist-led design, this extensive study
documents the Fellowship alongside the artist's previous work.
Published by National Gallery Global/Distributed by Yale University
Press Exhibition Schedule: Holburne Museum, Bath October 7,
2022-January 8, 2023 The National Gallery, London March 2-June 11,
2023
The first book to focus on Dame Paula Rego’s little-known
monumental triptych, Crivelli’s Garden, featuring an original
short story by novelist Chloe Aridjis, new photography, and an art
historical essay  Dame Paula Rego RA (1935–2022) was a
British-Portuguese artist whose large-scale figurative paintings
explored human relationships and the experience of women through
compelling, often subversive compositions. Inspired by the predella
panel of Carlo Crivelli’s altarpiece La Madonna della Rondine
(after 1490), Rego produced Crivelli’s Garden in 1990−91 while
she was artist in residence at the National Gallery. This
monumental triptych reimagined the site of Crivelli’s panel as a
radical space populated by female figures from myth, folklore, and
the Bible, alongside animals drawn from Aesop’s fables and other
classical texts. Literature was a major influence on Rego’s
practice throughout her career: this publication in turn celebrates
the far-reaching influence of Rego’s paintings with an original
short story by Mexican novelist Chloe Aridjis, inspired by Rego’s
triptych. Illustrated with previously unpublished preparatory
drawings and newly photographed details of the painting, the book
also features an art historical essay on the work. Â
Published by National Gallery Global/Distributed by Yale University
Press  Exhibition Schedule:  The National Gallery,
London (July 20–October 29, 2023)
The National Gallery's second Artist in Residence is Ali Cherri (b.
1976), a Lebanon-born artist based in Beirut and Paris. Known for
his sculptures, films and installations, Cherri is interested in
the aesthetics, practices and politics associated with the museum
classification and collecting of objects, animals, images, and
their narratives. Cherri was recently awarded the Silver Lion at
the 2022 Venice Biennale. The first survey of Cherri's work in
English, this book will give an overview of the artist's
archaeological approach to the heritage of objects by investigating
their relationships to history, society and nature. It will
introduce Cherri to a broad audience and document his journey from
the beginning of his residency to the production and display of the
final work at the National Gallery in the autumn of 2021, followed
by the Herbert Art Gallery & Museum in spring 2022. Published
by National Gallery Company/Distributed by Yale University Press
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