Press Cuttings Bob Dylan - The Drawn Blank Series 2008 The Times Friday 6 June 2008 Circ. 618,160 24 Bruton Street, London W1J 6QQ T +44 (0)20 7659 7640 F +44 (0)20 7495 4 7 41 29 New Bond Street, London W1S 2RL T +44 (0)20 7499 4508 F +44 (0)20 7495 7 512 info @ halcyongaller y.com www.halcyongaller y.com Press Cuttings Bob Dylan - The Drawn Blank Series 2008 The Times Friday 6 June 2008 Circ. 618,160 24 Bruton Street, London W1J 6QQ T +44 (0)20 7659 7640 F +44 (0)20 7495 4 7 41 29 New Bond Street, London W1S 2RL T +44 (0)20 7499 4508 F +44 (0)20 7495 7 512 info @ halcyongaller y.com www.halcyongaller y.com Press Cuttings Bob Dylan - The Drawn Blank Series 2008 The Times Friday 6 June 2008 Circ. 618,160 24 Bruton Street, London W1J 6QQ T +44 (0)20 7659 7640 F +44 (0)20 7495 4 7 41 29 New Bond Street, London W1S 2RL T +44 (0)20 7499 4508 F +44 (0)20 7495 7 512 info @ halcyongaller y.com www.halcyongaller y.com Press Cuttings Bob Dylan - The Drawn Blank Series 2008 The Times Friday 6 June 2008 Circ. 618,160 24 Bruton Street, London W1J 6QQ T +44 (0)20 7659 7640 F +44 (0)20 7495 4 7 41 29 New Bond Street, London W1S 2RL T +44 (0)20 7499 4508 F +44 (0)20 7495 7 512 info @ halcyongaller y.com www.halcyongaller y.com Press Cuttings Bob Dylan - The Drawn Blank Series 2008 The Times Friday 6 June 2008 Circ. 618,160 24 Bruton Street, London W1J 6QQ T +44 (0)20 7659 7640 F +44 (0)20 7495 4 7 41 29 New Bond Street, London W1S 2RL T +44 (0)20 7499 4508 F +44 (0)20 7495 7 512 info @ halcyongaller y.com www.halcyongaller y.com Press Cuttings Bob Dylan - The Drawn Blank Series 2008 The Times Friday 6 June 2008 Circ. 618,160 24 Bruton Street, London W1J 6QQ T +44 (0)20 7659 7640 F +44 (0)20 7495 4 7 41 29 New Bond Street, London W1S 2RL T +44 (0)20 7499 4508 F +44 (0)20 7495 7 512 info @ halcyongaller y.com www.halcyongaller y.com Press Cuttings Bob Dylan - The Drawn Blank Series 2008 The Times Friday 6 June 2008 Circ. 618,160 24 Bruton Street, London W1J 6QQ T +44 (0)20 7659 7640 F +44 (0)20 7495 4 7 41 29 New Bond Street, London W1S 2RL T +44 (0)20 7499 4508 F +44 (0)20 7495 7 512 info @ halcyongaller y.com www.halcyongaller y.com Press Cuttings Bob Dylan - The Drawn Blank Series 2008 The Times Friday 6 June 2008 Circ. 618,160 24 Bruton Street, London W1J 6QQ T +44 (0)20 7659 7640 F +44 (0)20 7495 4 7 41 29 New Bond Street, London W1S 2RL T +44 (0)20 7499 4508 F +44 (0)20 7495 7 512 info @ halcyongaller y.com www.halcyongaller y.com Press Cuttings Bob Dylan - The Drawn Blank Series 2008 Evening Standard Monday 9 June 2008 Circ. 284,030 24 Bruton Street, London W1J 6QQ T +44 (0)20 7659 7640 F +44 (0)20 7495 4 7 41 29 New Bond Street, London W1S 2RL T +44 (0)20 7499 4508 F +44 (0)20 7495 7 512 info @ halcyongaller y.com www.halcyongaller y.com Press Cuttings Bob Dylan - The Drawn Blank Series 2008 The Independent Tuesday 10 June 2008 Circ. 240,503 24 Bruton Street, London W1J 6QQ T +44 (0)20 7659 7640 F +44 (0)20 7495 4 7 41 29 New Bond Street, London W1S 2RL T +44 (0)20 7499 4508 F +44 (0)20 7495 7 512 info @ halcyongaller y.com www.halcyongaller y.com Press Cuttings Bob Dylan - The Drawn Blank Series 2008 The Independent Tuesday 10 June 2008 Circ. 240,503 24 Bruton Street, London W1J 6QQ T +44 (0)20 7659 7640 F +44 (0)20 7495 4 7 41 29 New Bond Street, London W1S 2RL T +44 (0)20 7499 4508 F +44 (0)20 7495 7 512 info @ halcyongaller y.com www.halcyongaller y.com Press Cuttings Bob Dylan - The Drawn Blank Series 2008 The Evening Standard Wednesday 11 June 2008 Circ. 284,030 24 Bruton Street, London W1J 6QQ T +44 (0)20 7659 7640 F +44 (0)20 7495 4 7 41 29 New Bond Street, London W1S 2RL T +44 (0)20 7499 4508 F +44 (0)20 7495 7 512 info @ halcyongaller y.com www.halcyongaller y.com Press Cuttings Bob Dylan - The Drawn Blank Series 2008 Channel 4 News Online Wednesday 11 June 2008 Unique Users 7,000,000 24 Bruton Street, London W1J 6QQ T +44 (0)20 7659 7640 F +44 (0)20 7495 4 7 41 29 New Bond Street, London W1S 2RL T +44 (0)20 7499 4508 F +44 (0)20 7495 7 512 info @ halcyongaller y.com www.halcyongaller y.com Press Cuttings Bob Dylan - The Drawn Blank Series 2008 Channel 4 News Online Wednesday 11 June 2008 Unique Users 7,000,000 24 Bruton Street, London W1J 6QQ T +44 (0)20 7659 7640 F +44 (0)20 7495 4 7 41 29 New Bond Street, London W1S 2RL T +44 (0)20 7499 4508 F +44 (0)20 7495 7 512 info @ halcyongaller y.com www.halcyongaller y.com Press Cuttings Bob Dylan - The Drawn Blank Series 2008 Times Literary Supplement Friday 13 June 2008 Circ. 33,768 24 Bruton Street, London W1J 6QQ T +44 (0)20 7659 7640 F +44 (0)20 7495 4 7 41 29 New Bond Street, London W1S 2RL T +44 (0)20 7499 4508 F +44 (0)20 7495 7 512 info @ halcyongaller y.com www.halcyongaller y.com Press Cuttings Bob Dylan - The Drawn Blank Series 2008 Uncut July 2008 Circ. 91,028 24 Bruton Street, London W1J 6QQ T +44 (0)20 7659 7640 F +44 (0)20 7495 4 7 41 29 New Bond Street, London W1S 2RL T +44 (0)20 7499 4508 F +44 (0)20 7495 7 512 info @ halcyongaller y.com www.halcyongaller y.com Press Cuttings Bob Dylan - The Drawn Blank Series 2008 Uncut July 2008 Circ. 91,028 24 Bruton Street, London W1J 6QQ T +44 (0)20 7659 7640 F +44 (0)20 7495 4 7 41 29 New Bond Street, London W1S 2RL T +44 (0)20 7499 4508 F +44 (0)20 7495 7 512 info @ halcyongaller y.com www.halcyongaller y.com International Press Cuttings Contents El Periodico de Catalunya (Spain) Tuesday 10 June 2008 San Francisco Business Times Saturday 10 May 2008 The Age Online (Australia) Tuesday 10 June 2008 Le Temps (Switzerland) Saturday 21 June 2008 Süddeutsche Zeitung (Germany) Saturday 21 and Sunday 22 June 2008 Sunday Star Times magazine (New Zealand) Sunday 22 June 2008 24 Bruton Street, London W1J 6QQ T +44 (0)20 7659 7640 F +44 (0)20 7495 4 7 41 29 New Bond Street, London W1S 2RL T +44 (0)20 7499 4508 F +44 (0)20 7495 7 512 info @ halcyongaller y.com www.halcyongaller y.com Press Cuttings Bob Dylan - The Drawn Blank Series 2008 El Periodico de Catalunya Tuesday 10 June 2008 Circ. 167,804 (COLOR) - Pub: PERIODICO ND Doc: 06895M Red: 60% Ed: Primera EDICION Cb: 00 Enviado por: Dia: 09/06/2008 - Hora: 22:54 68 MARTES 10 DE JUNIO DEL 2008 Conexión a internet: http://www.elperiodico.com [email protected] i ���� el Periódico ‘Son dos’ ESPECTÁCULOS CULTURA GENTE TELEVISIÓN TEATRE BORRÀS, 21.30 HORAS Faemino y Cansado regresan con sus disparatados gags. El dúo madrileño mantiene la chispa y el buen humor. LA OTRA FACETA DE UN CREADOR ÚNICO Bob Dylan expone en Londres los dibujos que le inspiraban sus giras La elitista galería Halcyon exhibe unas 300 obras del cantautor impregnadas de fuerza y de color El músico captó entre 1989 y 1992 los paisajes y personajes que iban desfilando ante sus ojos 33 Cuatro de los cuadros dibujados y coloreados por Bob Dylan que expone la galería Halcyon de Londres. Abajo, el cantautor estadounidense. BEGOÑA ARCE LONDRES P oeta, genio de la música, el gran Bob Dylan revela ahora una nueva faceta artística. La elegante galería Halcyon de Londres expondrá, desde este sábado y hasta finales de julio, una amplia selección de pinturas y dibujos del cantante. The Drawn Blank Series es una muestra de unas 300 obras, llenas de fuerza y color. Durante sus largas giras por los escenarios de América, Europa y Asia, entre 1989 y 1992, Dylan fue captando con sus lápices y pinceles los paisajes, ambientes y personajes que desfilaban ante sus ojos. En muchas ocasiones eran las vías del tren vacías, cruzándose en el infinito. En otras eran bocetos de las habitaciones de hotel por las que iba pasando, todas diferentes y tan iguales a la vez. Había también bares de carretera, con un cierto aire de desolación. A veces Dylan dibujaba retratos de seres anónimos que le llamaban la atención. Abundan las mujeres anónimas, desnudas en ocasiones, con las que quizás hizo el amor. Aquellos apuntes apresurados, realizados por puro placer se convirtieron en lienzos y cuadros en el 2007. Ahora cuelgan de los muros exquisitos de una de las galerías más prestigiosas de la capital británica. Algunos críticos creen ver en las pinturas de Dylan trazos y colores que serían influencias de impresionistas como Vicent van Gogh o quizás Gaugin. El músico, que ha cumplido 67 años y lleva 46 de carrera, afirma no tener ningún maestro. De haber alguna influencia, «es simplemente por accidente o por instinto». «No he tenido ninguna formación académica, donde aprender cómo hacer algo al estilo de Degas o de Van Gogh, o cómo copiar un Da Vinci», ha comentado con humor al diario The Times. / «No tengo facilidad para copiar paso a paso». Fue la directora del museo de la ciudad alemana de Chemnitz, Ingrid Mössinger, quien descubrió el libro de bocetos de Dylan, que había publicado Random House y le convenció para que los trabajara poniéndoles color. Al músico le encantó la idea y se puso manos a la obra con entusiasmo. Escaneó y amplió los viejos dibujos y durante 8 meses ensayó con acuarela, guash, lápiz y otras técnicas. Concienzudo, tenaz, en algunas ocasiones ha realizado tres versiones diferentes a partir de un mismo original, como es el caso de Woman near a window (Mujer cerca de una ventana) o Kitchen (Cocina). «Es un artista LIBRO DE BOCETOS que encara las artes plásticas como otras de sus facetas artísticas, con disciplina y talento», afirma la comisaria de la exposición, Kate Anderson. A pesar de los colores vibrantes, muchas de las pinturas de Dylan hablan de soledad y de abandono. Su atención se fija a menudo en algún deta- lle del espacio urbano, como un tobogán para niños, una terraza, una bicicleta apoyada en un árbol, o la fachada de ladrillo de un viejo edificio de viviendas. Abundan las escenas callejeras y los retratos de mujeres anónimas, como Woman en Red Lion Pub (Mujer en el Pub el León Rojo), una figura femenina sentada de espaldas en la barra de un bar con un llamativo vestido de color amarillo. O Two Sisters, (Dos hermanas), realizada en fuertes tonos azules y verdes. Más oscuro e intenso es el Portrait of Woman Smiling (Retrato de Mujer sonriendo) en negro y ocre. «En la mayoría de los casos no sabemos quienes son estas mujeres. Era gente con la que Dylan se iba encontrando durante sus giras y por alguna razón decidía pintarlas», afirma Anderson. La galería londinense Halcyon ha publicado un lujoso catálogo con una cuidada reproducción de todos los trabajos del artista, que es un impagable recuerdo de una experiencia única. El músico, que ha escrito a lo largo de toda su carrera más de 500 canciones y ha publicado 44 discos de los que ha vendido 110 millones de ejemplares, estará en España este verano, donde tiene previstos varios conciertos. H IMÁGENES DE LOS CUADROS EN www.elperiodico.com i nterferencias El pintor dominguero RAMÓN De España Paolo Conte dedicó una de sus canciones más melancólicamente crueles a esos pobres diablos que trabajan en lo suyo de lunes a viernes y que los fines de semana desempolvan pinceles para ser durante unas horas lo que nunca han podido ser a jornada completa. Bob Dylan no es exactamente un pobre diablo, sino uno de los seres más influyentes del siglo XX, pero sus obras recuerdan a las de esos pittori della domenica sobre los que ironizaba el cantautor de Asti. ¿Llegarían a una galería si no estuvieran firmadas por el bardo de Minnesota? Lo dudo. Sin ser tan horripilantes como las de otros artistas de fin de semana –pensemos en Rafael Alberti, los lamentables dibujitos de Günter Grass o los cuadros de búhos hechos con chinchetas de Camilo Sesto–, la verdad es que las acuarelas del señor Zimmerman no son gran cosa. 24 Bruton Street, London W1J 6QQ T +44 (0)20 7659 7640 F +44 (0)20 7495 4 7 41 29 New Bond Street, London W1S 2RL T +44 (0)20 7499 4508 F +44 (0)20 7495 7 512 info @ halcyongaller y.com www.halcyongaller y.com Press Cuttings Bob Dylan - The Drawn Blank Series 2008 San Francisco Business Times Saturday 10 May 2008 Unique Users. N/A 24 Bruton Street, London W1J 6QQ T +44 (0)20 7659 7640 F +44 (0)20 7495 4 7 41 29 New Bond Street, London W1S 2RL T +44 (0)20 7499 4508 F +44 (0)20 7495 7 512 info @ halcyongaller y.com www.halcyongaller y.com Press Cuttings Bob Dylan - The Drawn Blank Series 2008 The Age Online (Australia) Tuesday 10 June 2008 Unique Users. 2,967,282 24 Bruton Street, London W1J 6QQ T +44 (0)20 7659 7640 F +44 (0)20 7495 4 7 41 29 New Bond Street, London W1S 2RL T +44 (0)20 7499 4508 F +44 (0)20 7495 7 512 info @ halcyongaller y.com www.halcyongaller y.com Press Cuttings Bob Dylan - The Drawn Blank Series 2008 Le Temps (Switzerland) Saturday 21 June 2008 Circ. 50,000 20 Culture L’Euro ne vide pas les salles Bob Dylan chez les marchands d’art Footmania Cinémas et théâtres restent très fréquentés Exposition Le musicien et poète américain présente et vend à Londres une centaine d’œuvres picturales, tirées de dessins réalisés en tournée. Succès commercial total pour une icône absente Le Temps Samedi 21 juin 2008 Les directeurs des cinémas et théâtres romands sont soulagés. Contrairement au raz de marée prévu, la footmania ne vide pas leurs salles. Après presque deux semaines de compétition, tous, de Neuchâtel à Genève, constatent une fréquentation inespérée. Les raisons? Le mauvais temps, évidemment, jusqu’au milieu de la semaine passée, mais aussi la sortie de blockbusters comme Indiana Jones et Sex and the city. Les footophobes peuvent donc se réjouir: ces jours en Suisse, il y a une vie sociale en dehors du ballon rond. «Avec le beau temps et l’Euro, on avait budgété très peu d’entrées en juin. Or, c’est tout le contraire qui se passe, se réjouit Charles Vinzio, directeur de Pathé-Genève. Notre fréquentation est si bonne qu’elle dépasse même celle d’un mois de juin ordinaire.» C’est que la météo, elle, n’a rien d’ordinaire. Et les exploitants de salles de cinéma ont bénéficié de la sortie consécutive de deux grosses pointures. «Sûr que ces coups de pouce du calendrier sont bienvenus», confirme Teodor Teodorescu, directeur de Pathé-Lausanne dont les 15 salles, réparties entre Le Flon et les Galeries, projettent largement Indiana Jones et Sex and The City. Sentiment identique chez Vital Epelbaum, patron des cinémas neuchâtelois et biennois. «Les locomotives fonctionnent bien. Et on espère encore beaucoup des prochaines grosses sorties, Phénomènes ou Le journal d’une baby-sitter.» Moins de cinéma à Berne Mais même du côté du cinéma d’auteur, on ne note pas d’hémorragie dans l’affluence des spectateurs. «La période est moins creuse qu’on ne l’avait envisagé», observe Marc Salafa, directeur de Cinémotions, à Fribourg. «Pour moi, le danger tient plutôt, tout au long de l’année, dans le recours abusif aux DVD. Les jeunes, notamment, n’ont plus la culture du grand écran.» De son combat avec l’Euro, le cinéma sortirait presque vainqueur. Sauf à Berne, où plusieurs salles ont choisi de fermer en juin. Rénovation et vacances annuelles sont invoquées. Un cinéma va jusqu’à mentionner l’Euro comme raison de faire relâche. Et pour les théâtres qui n’ont pas encore clos leur saison? Satisfaction, là aussi. Au Théâtre de Carouge, bon score pour Caveman, one-man-show qui tombe à point nommé puisqu’il traite des différences indépassables entre hommes et femmes. Quant à Vidy-Lausanne, les trois spectacles à l’affiche ne désemplissent pas. «Les gens apprécient que nous proposions encore du spectacle vivant à cette période», conclut Sarah Turin, chef du service de presse. PROLITTERIS Marie-Pierre Genecand «Deux sœurs», Bob Dylan, 2007. Elles sont déclinées plusieurs fois, complices et rieuses ici, là indifférentes ou plutôt rivales, et dans des tons complètement différents. ARCHIVES Florence Gaillard, Londres Pas sûr que, signés Robert Zimmerman, les 97 tableaux présentés depuis ce week-end aient eu les faveurs de la Halcyon Gallery. On est à Mayfair, chiquissime quartier de boutiques et de galeries d’art du cœur de Londres. Là où les boutiques font tout pour ressembler à des galeries d’art et où les galeries d’art ont des airs de défilés de mode. Là où les maisons de vente aux enchères bondissent de records en records, protégées contre vents et marées de crises financières qui donnent comme un air soucieux aux banquiers de la City. Pas sûr donc que, signés Robert Zimmerman, les 97 tableaux aient été, en moins de deux jours, vendus entre – chut, c’est secret – 150 000 et 300 000 francs chacun, au moins. Mais les tableaux sont signés Bob Dylan. Un tableau de lui, et c’est le mythe accroché audessus de la cheminée. Sa signature, un petit bout d’histoire générationnelle qui ne nous glissera pas entre les doigts. Et un fétiche qui doit sûrement garantir à l’ac- La fortune de Stieg Larsson refusée La section du Parti socialiste suédois d’Umeaa a refusé jeudi l’argent que l’auteur de la trilogie Millénium, Stieg Larsson, lui avait attribué dans un testament de 1977 retrouvé récemment. «Nous ne voulons pas participer à des querelles de testament et nous ne voulons pas toucher de l’argent de cette façon», a déclaré le porte-parole du parti. (AFP) Brèves Musée U Le musée consacré au peintre Mathurin Méheut en Bretagne va rendre 5000 œuvres, données il y a plus de trente ans par la veuve de Picasso U Le tribunal correctionnel de Paris a débouté vendredi la petite-fille de Picasso, Marina Picasso, qui poursuivait en diffamation quéreur une part intangible du talent, de la liberté, de l’aura de l’auteur. Donc Dylan expose, c’est une première. Si l’on en croit son autobiographie (Chronicles: Volume One, 2004), il a toujours dessiné depuis 1961. Et puis, avant la musique, Dylan a tenté une école d’art, quelques mois, sans conviction. Outre des couvertures de disques et de magazines, une série de dessins avait été rassemblée dans un livre en 1994. Et puis, l’automne dernier, un musée allemand a présenté ses œuvres. Mais jamais le Zim, chanteur, musicien, poète, réalisateur, désormais Prix Pulitzer, n’avait réuni ses dessins et peintures pour les présenter globalement au public et les vendre. A l’origine, il s’agit de dessins que l’artiste a réalisés à ses heures perdues lors de tournées entre 1982 et 1992. Bien plus tard, Dylan a scanné ses dessins, les a imprimés en grand format, puis y a posé la couleur – gouache ou aquarelle. D’où ces séries exposées à Londres, d’un même motif dé- cliné dans des tons complètement différents, accentuant ici tel détail, ignorant là tel autre. La méthode coule de source, elle s’apparente à celle de Dylan chanteur – toujours réinventer ses chansons, réinterpréter pour la dix-millième fois «Blowin’ in the Wind», tenter selon l’humeur des versions folk, blues, rock, lentes, lasses ou frondeuses. Ainsi de ces Deux Sœurs – déclinées plusieurs fois, complices et rieuses ici, là indifférentes ou plutôt rivales selon le détail des expressions, et dans des tons complètement différents. Si Dylan a fait des portraits, la majorité de ses sujets sont les détails anodins de lieux anodins. La commode d’une chambre d’hôtel, le coin nocturne d’un bar, une cage d’escalier, la piscine d’un motel. Les lieux sont vides de présence humaine, urbains ou perdus dans des recoins d’Etats ruraux; le point de vue est surélevé, marquant la distance et une séparation d’avec le monde et ses couleurs vives, voire criardes. Une série de six pièces porte sur les voies de trains. Du crayon noir et des ciels en feu. Iconographie du voyage et de la fuite mais, dans le cas du chanteur, retour au paysage rassurant. «J’ai vu des trains depuis tout enfant. Le son d’un train dans le lointain me donne le sentiment d’être chez moi, d’être là où rien ne manque», a commenté Dylan. Bob Dylan viendra-t-il à Londres ou ne viendra-t-il pas? Le mystère est entretenu Dans une interview donnée au Times, Dylan cite Matisse, Derain, Monet et Gauguin comme les peintres qui ont marqué sa jeunesse. Un Homme sur le pont qui a les traits d’un cousin de Vincent Van Gogh pastiche le peintre hollandais. Dans les textes de présentation des œuvres, des critiques évoquent Degas ou, plus probant, Toulouse-Lautrec. Si Dylan, le songwriter, a été l’avant-garde des années folk et rock du XXe siècle américain, Dylan le peintre est davantage un illustrateur du XIXe siècle européen. Si Dylan est Dylan, ce n’est pas grâce à sa peinture, on l’aura compris. Il ne prétend pas le contraire, d’ailleurs. La seule chose qu’il prétende toujours et encore, c’est l’incapacité du monde entier à comprendre ou interpréter ses gestes, y compris picturaux. En tournée scandinave (le Neverending Tour n’en finit pas de tourner), Dylan viendra à Londres ou ne viendra pas, le mystère est entretenu. On se contente pour l’instant de quelques citations de l’artiste, gravées ici et là sur les murs de la galerie, toute vouée au culte du héros. Du genre: «Le propos de mes dessins est très indéfini. Ce sont des dessins très personnels.» Ça n’aidera pas beaucoup les exégètes, mais c’est signé Dylan. The Drawn Blank Series, de Bob Dylan. Halcyon Gallery, 24 Bruton Street, Londres. www.halcyongallery.com Jusqu’au 13 juillet. A Genève, Bujar Marika crie à l’eau Exposition Travail sur le réchauffement climatique Il s’est dédié tardivement aux arts plastiques. Bujar Marika utilise les moyens d’un art construit pour rendre des idées et pour agir sur les consciences autant que sur le goût. L’exposition à la galerie Andata.ritorno de l’artiste d’origine albanaise, qui vit en Suisse depuis 1992, a pour thème le réchauffement climatique. L’intention n’est pas d’alerter une fois de plus du danger imminent, de lancer un cri, vite perdu dans le brou- Soit un agencement de pendu- d’une baignoire – vide – flottant à Berne dans les années 1990. Il les «aveugles», en hommage à Bor- dans l’eau claire, bref la vision des s’est intéressé à l’art concret zuri24l’écrivain Brutondevenu Street, London W1Jauxquelles 6QQ T +44 7659 F +44 (0)20 7495 4 7 41 ges, aveugle absurdités mène l’in-(0)20 chois mais, plus7640 encore passionné mais resté clair-lucide, agence- conscience de notre société. par Duchamp et les artistes con29qui New 7499 4508depuis F +44 ment figureBond un motStreet, inscrit enLondon W1S 2RL T +44 (0)20 ceptuels, il privilégie une (0)20 7495 7 512 écriture braille. Blind Time, ce dis- Kit de survie pratique qui recourt forme info @ halcyongaller y.comà une www.halcyongaller y.com A la sortie, des bouteilles éti- ordonnée, pour donner corps à positif de pois noirs, nous renvoie en miroir notre époque aveugle quetées «Larmes de la banquise», une pensée engagée. aux conséquences de son propre titre de l’entier de l’exposition, Laurence Chauvy aveuglement… Les autres pièces sont proposées au visiteur, non misent aussi sur le pouvoir sinis- seulement comme souvenir d’une Bujar Marika: Larmes de la tre du noir. Ce sont des masques brève expérience, mais, d’une ma- banquise, installations. antipollution, imbibés de tein- nière plus menaçante, comme élé- Andata.ritorno, laboratoire d’art Press Cuttings Bob Dylan - The Drawn Blank Series 2008 Süddeutsche Zeitung Saturday 21 and Sunday 22 June 2008 Circ. 543,265 24 Bruton Street, London W1J 6QQ T +44 (0)20 7659 7640 F +44 (0)20 7495 4 7 41 29 New Bond Street, London W1S 2RL T +44 (0)20 7499 4508 F +44 (0)20 7495 7 512 info @ halcyongaller y.com www.halcyongaller y.com Press Cuttings Bob Dylan - The Drawn Blank Series 2008 Süddeutsche Zeitung Saturday 21 and Sunday 22 June 2008 Circ. 543,265 24 Bruton Street, London W1J 6QQ T +44 (0)20 7659 7640 F +44 (0)20 7495 4 7 41 29 New Bond Street, London W1S 2RL T +44 (0)20 7499 4508 F +44 (0)20 7495 7 512 info @ halcyongaller y.com www.halcyongaller y.com Press Cuttings Bob Dylan - The Drawn Blank Series 2008 Sunday Star Times magazine Sunday 22 June 2008 Circ. 200,000 profile don’t look back Odense, Denmark, and the not-quite-grand hotel that for the next two nights will be a home away from home for Bob Dylan. He arrived here from Reykjavik, four days after his 67th birthday and in the first stages of a lengthy itinerary that will take him through Scandinavia, the Baltic states, Austria, Italy, France, Andorra, Spain and Portugal between now and mid-July. To his irritation, others long ago gave this ongoing schedule the title of The Never-Ending Tour (habitually, he plays upwards of 100 concerts each year, often considerably more). As he prefers to see it: “I’m just making my living by plying a trade.” Achieving my promised audience proves to be a two-step process. First, his road manager takes me from the lobby to a darkened, sparsely furnished meeting room in which an orange-haired woman is sitting straight-backed and reading a novel. “If you could just wait here,” he begins, then disappears, his mobile clamped to his ear. Left alone, I introduce myself to the woman but she merely smiles enigmatically and continues with her book. Who is she? I still have no idea. Minutes later I am collected, taken up a flight of stairs and ushered towards a door that is ajar. As I approach it is opened wide by Dylan, who welcomes me inside with a soft handshake and a volley of courtesies: “How have you been?” (I have interviewed him twice before, in 1997 and 2001), “What’s been going on in your life?” and “Are you okay with the dark?” (here in what appears to be his bedroom, all the curtains have been drawn). My eyes adjusting to this premature twilight, I take in the fact that he is wearing boots, jeans and a loose sweatshirt, its sleeves pushed up above the elbows. That famous face is heavily lined and pale, but always warm and quick to smile. As we take seats at right angles to each other, he presses his fingertips into his greyflecked curls and vigorously rubs his scalp, as if to do so will focus his mind. I place on the low table between us the book that I have brought with me. “Heh, heh, heh!” Dylan chuckles, reaching out for it. “This is pretty handsome stuff.” He is looking at a straight-from-the-presses copy of The Drawn Blank 22 Series, produced by the Halcyon Gallery to coincide with the exhibition of his drawings in Mayfair, London. Will he visit the show itself? “I don’t know,” he says, seemingly transfixed by the book’s cover, his voice the familiar rasp that has inspired a million amateur impressionists. “I have all these dates to play. It might not be possible. I’d like to. We’ll have to see.” The haphazard process leading to the London show began nearly 20 years ago when he was approached by an editor at the American publishing company Random House. “They’d seen some of my sketches somewhere and asked if I’d like to do a whole book. Why not, you know? There was no predetermined brief. ‘Just deal with the material to hand, whatever that is. And do it however you want. You can be fussy, you can be slam-bang; it doesn’t matter.’ “Then they gave me a drawing book. I took it away with me and turned it back in again, full three years later.” Published in 1994 under the abbreviated title Drawn Blank, the resultant images had been executed both on the hoof while he was touring and in a more structured way in studios, using models (“Just anyone who’d be open to doing it”) and lights. What was going on in his life during that three-year period to inform or provide a back story to the work? “Just the usual,” Dylan shrugs, fixed in the hunkered-forward, hands-clasped position he will maintain for most of our time together. “I try to live as simply as is possible and was just drawing whatever I felt like drawing, whenever I felt like doing it. The idea was always to do it without affectation or self-reference, to provide some kind of panoramic view of the world as I was seeing it.” Built up of work that is often contemplative, sometimes exuberant but consistently technically accomplished and engaging, that view is of train halts, diners and dockyards, barflies, dandies and uniformed drivers glimpsed in New Orleans or New York, Stockholm or South Dakota. And of women. We’re left in no doubt that Dylan likes women. “They weren’t actually there at the same time,” he notes quickly, pointing, when his page-turning reveals the painting STORY: THE TIMES, LONDON Legendary singer-songwriter and now exhibited painter Bob Dylan loves to talk about his working life, but touch on the personal – past or present − and you risk his 1000-yard stare. Alan Jackson reports sunday 24 Bruton Street, London W1J 6QQ T +44 (0)20 7659 7640 F +44 (0)20 7495 4 7 41 29 New Bond Street, London W1S 2RL T +44 (0)20 7499 4508 F +44 (0)20 7495 7 512 info @ halcyongaller y.com www.halcyongaller y.com Press Cuttings Bob Dylan - The Drawn Blank Series 2008 Sunday Star Times magazine Sunday 22 June 2008 Circ. 200,000 hibition of his ’t know,” he miliar rasp that ates to play. arly 20 years shing company e and asked if I’d etermined brief. however you nd turned it erant but of train halts, mpsed in New n. We’re left e at the same he painting STORY: THE TIMES, LONDON e resultant ng and in a more open to doing ar period to an shrugs, aintain for most as just drawing a was always nd of panoramic sunday 23 24 Bruton Street, London W1J 6QQ T +44 (0)20 7659 7640 F +44 (0)20 7495 4 7 41 29 New Bond Street, London W1S 2RL T +44 (0)20 7499 4508 F +44 (0)20 7495 7 512 info @ halcyongaller y.com www.halcyongaller y.com Press Cuttings Bob Dylan - The Drawn Blank Series 2008 Sunday Star Times magazine Sunday 22 June 2008 Circ. 200,000 profile Two Sisters PAINTINGS: © 2007 BOB DYLAN Two Sisters, its subjects lounging, one clothed, the But years later there came an approach from other naked but for her bra. “They posed separately the Chemnitz City Art Gallery in Germany. Ingrid and I put them together afterwards.” Mössinger, its director and a fan of the 1965 There was little precedent within his own family album Bringing It All Back Home, had felt it likely for this talented eye, it seems. “Instead of playing that someone as adept as Dylan in the use of cards, my maternal grandmother would do these metaphoric and abstract language might also draw little still lives, but I can’t really say that had any or paint. Her research led her to the book Drawn influence on what I’ve done.” Art formed no part Blank, in the preface of which Dylan wrote of of his formal education and he recalls there being hoping to “eventually complete” its collection no public galleries in the Minnesotan communities of sketches. She encouraged him to do just that. (first Duluth, then Hibbing) of his youth. “I was in Digital scans were made of the original drawings my teens before I started to and then they were enlarged see books of paintings in the and transferred on to heavy “These ‘connoisseurs’ school library – frescoes or paper ready for reworking. of Bob Dylan. I don’t the work of Michelangelo – Dylan experimented with a feel they have an that kind of thing. And variety of colours. “And doing inkling of who I am and I didn’t really see the stuff so subverted the light. Every that properly had an impact picture spoke a different what I’m about. That on me – Matisse, Derain, language to me as the such people have spent Monet, Gauguin – ‘til later on, various colours were applied.” so much time thinking when I was in my twenties.” Attempts have been made about me? Get a life” By then, Dylan the university to pin down and name his dropout and fledgling folk influences. When I mention performer had gravitated to New York, where he this, Dylan wrongly takes it as a suggestion that the quickly discovered the Metropolitan Museum of work is pastiche or somehow derivative. “I haven’t Art. “It was overwhelming for me at the time – the trained in any academy where you learn how to immensity and sheer variety of stuff on display. The do something in the style of Degas or Van Gogh, first exhibition I saw there was of Gauguin paintings or how to copy Da Vinci,” he retorts. “I don’t have and I found I could stand in front of any one of them that facility to copy note for note. Influenced by? for as long as I’d sit at the movies, yet not get tired If I had the ability to paint like any of those guys on my feet. I’d lose all sense of time. It was an I might see the similarity, but I don’t. If there is intriguing thing.” It was as his music career gathered anything it’s just by accident and instinctive.” Which pace that he found himself first trying his own is all that any critic was suggesting, after all. But, hand at drawing. “Mostly when I was on a train it seems, he is as uncomfortable at having his or in a café, just to make sense of what was in paintings deconstructed as he is his songs. my immediate world. I found it relaxed me. Some Of the latter process, he said on our last meeting: of the stuff I kept, some I didn’t.” “These so-called connoisseurs of Bob Dylan music? It was sketches completed in this manner and I don’t feel they know a thing or have an inkling of spirit that, years later, came to the attention of who I am and what I’m about. That such people Random House. However, little accord was given have spent so much time thinking about who? to the book on its eventual publication. “The critics Me? Get a life, please.” didn’t want to review it. The publisher told me they Today he expresses similar impatience with couldn’t get past the idea of another singer who the critics who have read into his art a variety dabbled. You know, like, ‘David Bowie, Joni Mitchell, of underlying feelings – anonymity, transience, Paul McCartney... Everyone’s doing it these days.’ rootlessness, even loneliness. Reaching again for No one from the singing profession was going the Halcyon book. “Let’s have a look, shall we?” to be taken seriously by the art world, I was told, The pages fall open at Woman in Red Lion Pub, but that was okay. I wasn’t expecting anything her dress executed in a vivid yellow. “Do you see phenomenal to happen. It’s not like the drawings loneliness in that? I don’t. And this one’s just a were revolutionary. They weren’t going to change pastoral scene. What’s rootless, transient and lonely anyone’s way of thinking.” about that? It’s a mystery why anybody would say 24 Bruton Street, London W1J 6QQ T +44 (0)20 7659 7640 F +44 (0)20 7495 4 7 41 29 New Bond Street, London W1S 2RL T +44 (0)20 7499 4508 F +44 (0)20 7495 7 512 info @ halcyongaller y.com www.halcyongaller y.com or think such a thing. various images with revealing himself as his name and status than connect directly “I just find it to be ends [by which he m being endless, so I’ll it in some way. It jus So he would prefe response to the work for themes and insig the beholder...There’ my mind. Or even if is fine.” On both our previo his disdain for those every scrap of paper studio out-take that h mind, I ask if it was a name on each of the he exclaims, laughing it was.” And did he p in advance? “I did, be right. Finally you thin for it, like you’re writi He has, he says, n the images. “It’s the In the Sixties, by the way past the recorde ‘No, don’t release tha now.’ So it is with the ‘I could have done th In the end, though go and hope you’ll kn When I ask if he fi preferable to the one grins and pulls a face world’s a made-up bu I know from publishi Press Cuttings Bob Dylan - The Drawn Blank Series 2008 Sunday Star Times magazine Sunday 22 June 2008 Circ. 200,000 PAINTINGS: © 2007 BOB DYLAN Two Sisters or think such a thing.” And the idea that, in framing various images with windows and doors, he is revealing himself as a perennial outsider, forced by his name and status to observe the world rather than connect directly with it? Dylan rolls his eyes. “I just find it to be less satisfying to have the ends [by which he means the edges of the image] being endless, so I’ll put a window there or block it in some way. It just looks better to me that way.” So he would prefer a purely emotional, instinctive response to the work rather than any searching for themes and insights? “If it pleases the eye of the beholder...There’s no more to it than that, to my mind. Or even if it repels the eye. Either one is fine.” On both our previous meetings, Dylan voiced his disdain for those completists who wish to see every scrap of paper he has written on or hear every studio out-take that he has rejected. With that in mind, I ask if it was a big deal for him to sign his name on each of the Drawn Blank paintings. “Yes!” he exclaims, laughing. “I finally grew into it, but yes, it was.” And did he perhaps practise his signature in advance? “I did, because it’s tricky getting it just right. Finally you think, ‘Oh, to hell...’ and just go for it, like you’re writing a cheque or something.” He has, he says, no particular favourite among the images. “It’s the same as with the early songs... In the Sixties, by the time they came out we were way past the recorded versions and were saying, ‘No, don’t release that. We are playing it this way now.’ So it is with the art. I find myself thinking, ‘I could have done this or that to make it better.’ In the end, though, you’ve just got to let the work go and hope you’ll know to do better next time.” When I ask if he finds the art establishment preferable to the one he is more used to, Dylan grins and pulls a face of mock disgust. “The music world’s a made-up bunch of hypocritical rubbish. I know from publishing a memoir [2004’s Chronicles Train Tracks Woman in Red Lion Pub Woman on Bed Volume One] that the book people are a whole it didn’t clash with any other commitments. lot saner. And the art world? From the small steps If something does, then I simply cannot do it.” I’ve taken in it, I’d say, yeah, the people are honest, By commitments, one presumes Dylan means upfront and deliver what they say. Basically, they not just his touring schedule but also his personal are who they say they are. They don’t pretend. and familial relationships. Only the bald facts are And having been in the music world most of my known in this regard. He has four grown-up children life [he laughs again], I can tell you it’s not that (Jesse, Anna Lea, Samuel and rock singer Jakob) way. Let’s just say it’s less... dignified.” from a 10-year marriage to former model Sara He tells me that he continued to draw for his Lowndes that ended in divorce in 1977. And in 2001 pleasure after the Random House commission it was revealed by a biographer that he was married was fulfilled. “Not as intensely but yes, I have from 1986 to 1992 to one of his former backing sketchbooks from the years since then. Of course, singers, Carol Dennis, and has another daughter, what I release to the public and what I keep for Desiree, also now an adult, from the union. myself are two different things.” But inquiries about his non-work life cause him He has had proposals to shut down. Not even a fact for two future series of as basic as that of where he “The music world’s paintings, the first of which lives (his main home is believed a made-up bunch of would involve having to be a mansion on the coast hypocritical rubbish. celebrities sit for him. beyond Los Angeles) receives The book world is a lot “I could pick the names ready validation, and when saner. Having been in but don’t want to. I’d rather I ask if he has a studio in which be given a list and have he worked on the paintings, the music world most of someone else contact the he will offer only, “Well, there my life... let’s just say people to find out if they’re are spaces in some of the it’s less ...dignified” up for it. So I’m waiting properties where I can do just to see who they might be about any old thing”, before thinking of. I assume it’s movers and shakers. looking off into the middle distance, awaiting the You know, inventors, mathematicians, scientists, next question. business people, actors... We’ll see. Such reticence has earned him a reputation as “But what interests me more is the idea of a rock’s grumpy old man, a curmudgeon who refuses collection based on historically romantic figures: to appear grateful that he is revered and adored. Napoleon and Josephine, Dante and Beatrice, But whether or not he intends it to do so, such Captain John Smith and Pocahontas, Brad and determined self-protection merely enhances the Angelina [here he laughs]... I could use my own myth and mystery. Today and after spending much imagination for that. It wouldn’t have to be the actual of the 1980s through to the mid-1990s out in the people, obviously.” But the latter two might be critical cold, Dylan’s star is higher than at any time delighted to sit for him, no? Dylan chuckles. “Maybe. since the 1960s, the decade with which he is Who knows? All I’ll say is that I’m intrigued by the most closely associated (erroneously in his view). basic idea. Whether or not it comes to fruition, time Honours, awards and citations all but rain down will tell. This [exhibition] was easy to do because upon him these days: it is as if we have all >> sunday 25 24 Bruton Street, London W1J 6QQ T +44 (0)20 7659 7640 F +44 (0)20 7495 4 7 41 29 New Bond Street, London W1S 2RL T +44 (0)20 7499 4508 F +44 (0)20 7495 7 512 info @ halcyongaller y.com www.halcyongaller y.com Press Cuttings Bob Dylan - The Drawn Blank Series 2008 Sunday Star Times magazine Sunday 22 June 2008 Circ. 200,000 profile awoken to the fact that we will not see his like again. unreleased or rare material alongside alternative versions “Writing any kind of Not that anyone doubts that he has a long life still to live. of existing tracks recorded between 1989 and 2006. book is a lonely thing… “Well, thank you for that!” he notes with a laugh. Coming on top of the recent award to him of a You have to disassociate For any further insights into his private world we must special Pulitzer prize recognising “his profound impact and detach yourself wait to see if any crumbs are thrown in the next instalment on popular music and American culture, marked by lyrical from just about of the intended three-book Chronicles (“I could do more. compositions of extraordinary poetic power” (“I hope they everything and It wouldn’t be a problem in terms of material”), at which don’t ask for it back!”), all of this would suggest that he everybody… I didn’t he is already at work. Yes, he allows, he was gratified by has arrived at a very creative but also contented period like that part of it all” the critical and commercial success of Volume One. within his life. “I’ve always felt that,” he says. “It’s just “Especially given the effort that went into it. Writing sometimes I’ve got more going on than at other times.” any kind of book is a lonely thing. You cut yourself off from But life is good? “To me, it’s never been otherwise.” friends and family to find that necessarily quiet place in your mind. You have My time with Dylan is up and we stand in preparation for my leaving to disassociate and detach yourself from just about everything and everybody. the room. As a last aside, I ask for his take on the US political situation I didn’t like that part of it at all. in the run-up to November’s presidential election. “It took me maybe two years in total. I was touring so much in the beginning. “Well, you know right now America is in a state of upheaval,” he says. On days off or on a bus, I’d write my thoughts out in longhand or on a typewriter. “Poverty is demoralising. You can’t expect people to have the virtue of purity It was the transcribing of the stuff, the rereading and retelling of it, that was when they are poor. But we’ve got this guy out there now who is redefining time-consuming and I came to figure that there had to be a better way. I know the nature of politics from the ground up... Barack Obama. He’s redefining what that is now. You need a full-time secretary so that you can get the ideas what a politician is, so we’ll have to see how things play out. Am I hopeful? down immediately, then deal with them later.” Yes, I’m hopeful that things might change. Some things are going to have to.” Meanwhile, there is the continuing delight that is his own radio show (he He offers a parting handshake. “You should always take the best from the smiles at the mention of it), Theme Time Radio Hour With Your Host Bob Dylan, past, leave the worst back there and go forward into the future,” he notes the brainchild of America’s XM Satellite Radio. And later this year he will release as the door closes between us. N a further volume within the ongoing Bob Dylan Bootleg Series, featuring For more of Dylan’s art, see www.halcyongallery.com and www.bobdylanart.com 24 Bruton Street, London W1J 6QQ T +44 (0)20 7659 7640 F +44 (0)20 7495 4 7 41 29 New Bond Street, London W1S 2RL T +44 (0)20 7499 4508 F +44 (0)20 7495 7 512 info @ halcyongaller y.com www.halcyongaller y.com