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Swinging London | Hazlitt Holland-Hibbert

Three linked exhibitions this week, each carrying with them a whiff of patchouli oil and pot. It’s not quite (yet) a Summer of Love in London, but these shows all reach back to the 1960s, a time of Pop and Op… and some very big floppy collars.

One of the biggest and floppiest is sported by legendary fashion designer Ossie Clark, sketched at home by the still more legendary (and decade-defining) David Hockney. This delicate pencil drawing is on show at Hazlitt Holland-Hibbert, in the bluntly but accurately titled exhibition, Swinging London.

david hockney - ossie clark powis terrace Ossie Clark. Powis Terrace (1968)

Clark’s demeanour is as noble-but-apprehensive as one of Titian’s young noblemen, though clever Hockney suggests it’s all a pose: Clark’s fat sausage fingers are clinging for dear life to his teacup. The delicacy of Hockney’s genius pencil, outlining that collar, contrasts with blunt boldness of his 60s British counterparts elsewhere in the exhibition. For example, a pair of homegrown Pop artists, Allen Jones’ You Dare featuring an aluminium staircase integrated into a landscape painting, and Gerald Laing’s painted Ben-Day dots of space-walking astronauts.

Over the road at Waddington Custot, Peter Blake’s got a show of collages, which carries some of the vim and humour of his Pop colleagues. Most famous for his collage’d cover of that most 60s of albums, the Beatles’ Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, Blake’s stuck with his manically over-populated canvases of cutouts in the intervening years, and shows a new series inspired by that great 20th century recluse, Joseph Cornell.

Blake imagines Cornell with a much fuller and richer life than he actually had. Far from a shut-in in New York, Blake has him - or at least a photo cut-out - travelling to the opera, to Amsterdam, and to the Parthenon, often accompanied by beautiful dancers and film-star blondes, from Marilyn to Pamela Anderson to Debbie Harry.

peter blake - installation view Peter Blake: Time Traveller (installation view)

In a video accompanying the show, Blake confesses: “Collecting is a phenomenon within my work. There are collections where I’m collecting material that will be made into something and leave me.” Such generosity.

Another eccentric active during the 60s, Eileen Agar, has an exhibition at The Redfern Gallery, along with younger artists inspired by her. Though she came to fame much earlier than the other artists mentioned - even featuring in the famous International Surrealist Exhibition in 1936 - she kept working throughout the century.

eileen agar - snail Untitled Collage (Snail) (c. 1970)

It might have been because I saw the other two shows on the same afternoon, but for me Agar’s small, blocky, jewel-like acrylic paintings and collages capture some of the spirit of that age (of Aquarius). Groovy as a lava lamp.

Swinging London is at Hazlitt Holland-Hibbert (London). 12 April 2021 -